1 / 10

Equity and Access to High-Quality Instruction in Middle School Mathematics

Equity and Access to High-Quality Instruction in Middle School Mathematics . Collaborators on SGER work: Paul Cobb, Glenn Colby, Anne Garrison, Lynsey Gibbons, Bob Jim é nez , Rich Milner, Rebecca Schmidt, Emily Shahan , & Jonee

weston
Télécharger la présentation

Equity and Access to High-Quality Instruction in Middle School Mathematics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Equity and Access to High-Quality Instruction in Middle School Mathematics Collaborators on SGER work: Paul Cobb, Glenn Colby, Anne Garrison, Lynsey Gibbons, Bob Jiménez, Rich Milner, Rebecca Schmidt, EmilyShahan,& Jonee Wilson; Vanderbilt University Melissa Boston, Duquesne University Kara Jackson McGill University

  2. Specifying A Vision of Ambitious and Equitable Instruction • If instruction was equitable, all students would be supported to participate substantially in each phase of a mathematics lesson • Not necessarily in the same ways • Specify concrete forms of instructional practice that are learnable in the context of high-quality professional development Jackson, K., & Cobb, P. (under review). Refining a vision of ambitious mathematics instruction to address issues of equity.

  3. Ambitious Vision of Mathematics Instruction (e.g., McClain, 2002; NCTM, 2000; Stein, Engle, Smith, & Hughes, 2008; Stein, Henningsen, & Silver, 2000)

  4. Ambitious and Equitable Vision of Mathematics Instruction Jackson, K., Shahan, E., Gibbons, L., & Cobb, P. (under review). Launching tasks to support all students’ learning.

  5. Revised Question • What does it take to support middle-grades mathematics teachers’ development of ambitious and equitable instructional practices on a large scale?

  6. Next Steps: Supporting Ambitious & Equitable Teaching at Scale • Test and refine a comprehensive set of hypotheses regarding the development of an instructional system and the practices of the various role groups • organized around ambitious and equitable teaching

  7. Components of an Instructional System • Explicit goals for students’ mathematical learning • Vision of ambitious & equitable mathematics instruction—concrete instructional practices • Instructional materials • Pull-out professional development (PD) focused on specific forms of practice, organized around materials, sustained over time • Teacher collaborative time focused on specific forms of practice that have been focus on pull-out PD • Student assessments that focus on above learning goals and can inform • ongoing improvement of mainstream instruction • identification of students who are currently struggling and require additional support (e.g., Bryk, 2009; Lampert, Boerst, & Graziani, 2011)

  8. Supporting Ambitious & Equitable Teaching at Scale • Hypothesis: Development of an instructional system will support improvement in teachers’ • Vision of high-quality mathematics instruction • Vision of students’ mathematical capabilities (Horn, 2007) • Mathematical knowledge for teaching (Hill, Schilling, & Ball, 2004) • Quality of instruction

  9. Supporting Ambitious & Equitable Teaching at Scale • Development of a coherent instructional system organized around ambitious and equitable goals for teaching has implications for various role groups’ practices • e.g., Coaches, Principals, District leaders

  10. Product • Empirically-grounded theory of action for the development of ambitious and equitable instruction in middle-grades mathematics

More Related