Schools
Montclair State University: What STEM Innovation Fellows Learned During COVID-19
With its focus on reshaping the way math is taught in elementary school, the New Jersey STEM Innovation Fellowship provided an important ...

July 1, 2021
With its focus on reshaping the way math is taught in elementary school, the New Jersey STEM Innovation Fellowship provided an important lesson during the course of the coronavirus pandemic – the support teachers have for one another is something they can count on.
Find out what's happening in Montclairfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
That’s been the experience of Racheal Safier, a teacher in Newark, New Jersey, who earned her Master of Arts in Teaching in 2014 and graduated in June with a second master’s degree in Educational Leadership from Montclair State.
As one of 30 New Jersey teachers selected for the fellowship modeled after Math For America, Safier says the teachers were engaged in a teaching innovation known as number strings to help students develop their own big ideas about mathematics when COVID-19 upended the last school year.
Find out what's happening in Montclairfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
“When the pandemic hit, many of us got sent home and we had to figure out this whole remote teaching situation,” Safier says. The fellowship program’s meetings also moved online, pivoting from tips on best classroom practices to the virtual tools teachers were using at different grade levels for teaching and learning.
PRISM (Professional Resources in Science and Mathematics) at Montclair State University is partnering with Math for America, Princeton University and Rowan University to offer the NJ STEM Innovation Fellowship, a teacher leader program for New Jersey K-5 math teachers. Launched in 2019, participants are selected through a rigorous application process and receive a stipend.
“It’s all about having that community of teachers who are interested in reflecting on their practice and getting better and best serving their students,” Safier says.
According to Jennifer Robinson, executive director of the Center of Pedagogy and an Urban Teacher Residency principal investigator, “I think Rachel and this program understand a basic principle in education: We do not learn in isolation, we learn in community. When groups of teachers come together to learn from each other, deeper learning can happen for them and for their students.”
This press release was produced by Montclair State University. The views expressed here are the author’s own.