
The return to school in January often feels like a "reset" button for both teachers and students. The holiday decorations are down, the syllabus is halfway through, and the winter slump is waiting in the wings. However, the New Year provides a unique pedagogical window. In the math classroom, resolutions aren’t just for fitness or finances; they are a powerful tool for shifting mindsets and building "mathfidence."
By integrating New Year resolutions into your curriculum, you can move math away from being a series of abstract procedures and toward a practice of personal growth and logical goal-setting.
Math is one of the few subjects where students frequently walk in with a fixed mindset, often declaring, "I’m just not a math person." The New Year is the perfect time to challenge this.
Instead of traditional resolutions, encourage students to set Growth Mindset Resolutions. These focus on the process rather than the grade. Instead of saying "I will get an A in Algebra.", try "I will ask at least one clarifying question per week" or "I will show all my work on every multi-step problem."
These resolutions are attainable and trackable, mirroring the way we solve equations: by breaking a large problem into manageable, logical steps.
Why not use the actual math to teach the resolutions? January is a great time to introduce or review Data and Probability. Students can create "Habit Trackers" using coordinate planes or bar graphs to visualize their progress.
You can also teach the concept of SMART goals through a mathematical lens:
Specific: Define the variable (x = pages read).
Measurable: Assign a value ().
Achievable: Is the inequality true?
Relevant: Does this align with the overall function of your life?
Time-bound: Set the limit ().
When students see that goal-setting is essentially a word problem they have the power to solve, the "real-world application" of math becomes undeniable.
Resolutions shouldn't just be individual; they can be a collective effort. Setting a Classroom Resolution fosters a sense of community. Perhaps the class resolves to reach a certain "streak" on a math software program, or to reduce the "collective groan" when a word problem appears on the screen.
To keep it light, you can even use the math puns we’ve discussed. A classroom resolution could be: "In 2026, we resolve to be like a angle—always right (or at least always trying to be!)."
Finally, January resolutions serve as a vital mid-year check-in. It’s an opportunity for students to reflect on what "functions" are working in their study habits and which "variables" need to be changed. By documenting these goals in their math journals, they create a record of their own intellectual evolution.
When we bring the New Year spirit into the math lab, we prove that mathematics isn't just about finding the right answer—it’s about the resilience required to keep looking for it. It’s about understanding that even if you hit a "limit" or encounter an "imaginary" obstacle, you have the tools to calculate a new path forward. Let me know what you think, I'd love to hear. Have a great weekend and a wonderful new year.





