Abstract
Slow Reveal Graphs are an instructional routine designed to promote sense making by gradually unveiling components of a graph and inviting students to notice, wonder, hypothesize, and revise their thinking. While typically used to support data literacy, this paper describes how a middle school mathematics teacher adapted the routine to deepen students’ conceptual understanding of the coordinate plane. In “That’s Where I Sit!”, the teacher transformed her classroom seating arrangement into a coordinate grid and used a slow reveal sequence to introduce coordinate points incrementally. As students engaged with the unfolding image, they reasoned about the meaning of the dots, identified axes and quadrants, and connected abstract coordinates to their physical locations in the classroom. Classroom dialogue illustrates how the routine supported mathematical discourse, normalized conjecture and error, and strengthened connections between mathematical representations and students’ lived experiences. The activity positioned students as active sense makers while supporting the Standards for Mathematical Practice, particularly reasoning abstractly and quantitatively and constructing and critiquing arguments. The paper concludes with practical guidance for designing and implementing slow reveal routines beyond data analysis, offering teachers concrete strategies for adapting the routine to other mathematical topics to foster engagement, discussion, and conceptual understanding.
Keywords
coordinate plane, instructional routines
How to Cite
Joswick, C., Williams, L. K. & Felton-Koestler, M., (2026) ““That’s Where I Sit!”: A Slow Reveal of the Coordinate Plane”, Ohio Journal of School Mathematics 102(1): 8, 84-90. doi: https://doi.org/10.18061/ojsm.7048