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Math in the Middle What are we learning about rural mathematics education? Ruth Heaton and Jim Lewis University of Nebraska – Lincoln . M 2 Goal. Invest in high-quality teachers
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Math in the Middle What are we learning about rural mathematics education? Ruth Heaton and Jim Lewis University of Nebraska – Lincoln
M2 Goal Invest in high-quality teachers * To improve K-12 student achievement in mathematics and to significantly reduce achievement gaps in the mathematical performance of diverse student populations.
M2 Partnership Vision • Create and sustain a University, Educational Service Unit (ESU), Local School District partnership • Educate and support teams of outstanding middle level (Grades 5 – 8) mathematics teachers who will become intellectual leaders in their schools, districts, and ESUs. • Provide evidence-based contributions to research on learning, teaching, and professional development. • Place a special focus on rural teachers, schools, and districts.
Rural needs assessment • The top five priorities for the rural educators we surveyed are: (1) expanding opportunities for collaboration and resource sharing, (2) increasing student engagement with learning, (3) creating professional learning communities, (4) understanding student learning skills and abilities, and (5) deepening teacher knowledge of their content area.
Reaching rural teachers with M2 courses • Academic Year Courses • Blackboard • Polycom • Breeze • PC NoteTaker • Increased Instructional Support • Additional offerings?
Reaching rural teachers with M2 courses • Bringing Professional Development Opportunities to Rural Nebraska • Courses at ESU 13 in Scottsbluff • Math 800T – Summer 2005 • 1-Day Mathematics Workshop – February 2006 • Math 802T – Summer 2006 • How do we finance similar opportunities?
Math in the Middle Research Agenda What are the capabilities of teachers to translate the mathematical knowledge and habits of mind acquired through the professional development opportunities of M2 into measurable changes in teaching practice? To what extent do observable changes in mathematics teaching practice translate into measurable improvement in student performance?
Understanding The Rural Context • 64 of 96 Math in the Middle Participants are teaching in rural areas of Nebraska • 64 rural Math in the Middle Participants teach in 45 different school districts and 51 different schools in Nebraska
Of 64 Rural Math in the Middle Participants: • 26 teach in towns of less than 1,000 • 32 teach in towns between 1,000-15,000 • 6 teach in towns of more than 15,000
Assessing Student Achievement • the research challenge created by Nebraska’s state assessment system • using local assessments, standardized tests, and our own assessment • a qualitative study of the nature of middle school student responses to alternative assessment items requiring reasoning and communication
Talking to Teachers • A study study of the professional lives of rural Math in the Middle participants, funded by Nebraska Rural Initiative, Sandy Scofield, UNL. • relationship to colleagues and the community - the advantages and tensions of teaching in a small school • extracurricular school related responsibilities • out of school responsibilities
Asking about Leadership and Instructional Improvement Survey, Jim Spillane, Northwestern University • sources of instructional leadership - network within M2 and statewide • activities and opinions related to school leadership in instructional improvement, expertise in mathematics leadership and the conditions associated with each - people, resources and activities teachers seek out to gain information and advice related to teaching in general and math specifically
Classroom Observations What does it look like as M2 teachers translate mathematics learning in the Institute into classroom practice? How do teachers translate the idea of mathematical habits of mind as developed in the Institute into their work with middle school students?
How does diversity among students impact the improvement of mathematics education? What are the capacities of M2 teachers working with diverse populations to translate what they are learning into classroom practice? What does a M2 teacher’s classroom practice look like when diversity is envisioned as an asset rather than as a deficiency?
How is school capacity built in settings where more than one M2 teacher is in a school? How do M2 teachers interact both with each other and with other (non-M2) teachers in their school communities? What is the position of M2 teachers in their school communities as a whole, in terms of leadership, decision making, and classroom practice?
18 teachers (six from each cohort) plus any M2 colleagues in the same school 3 school clusters of M2 teachers
Knowledge Generated by M2 Teachers • Using Math Vocabulary Building to Increase Problem Solving Abilities in a 5th Grade Classroom • The Effect of Student Journals and Group Work on Students’ Attitudes in Math • Ability Perceptions of ‘Tracked’ vs. ‘Untracked’ Seventh Grade Math Students
Greater Understanding Through Improved Homework Justifications • The Effects of Self-Assessment on Learning • Self-Directed Learning in the Middle School Classroom
How to Better Prepare for Assessment and Create a More Technologically Advanced Classroom • Daily Problem Solving Warm-Ups: Harboring Mathematical Thinking in the Middle School Classroom • Departmentalization in the 5th Grade Classroom: Re-thinking the Elementary School Model
Bad Medicine: Homework or Headache: Responsibility and Accountability for Middle Level Mathematics Students • The Effects of Teaching Problem Solving Strategies to Low Achieving Students • Factors that Influence Mathematics Attitudes • The Effect of Staff Development on Teacher Practice • Math Anxiety: What Can Teachers Do to Help Their Students Overcome the Feeling?
Cooperative Learning Groups in the Eighth Grade Math Classroom • An In-Depth Study of Student Engagement • Motivating Middle School Students
An Analysis of the Action Research Projects What does it mean to the teachers to translate learning in the Institute into classroom practice? What insights do these studies offer into the nature of teacher learning and change?