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Everyday Mathematics Chapter 4

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Title: Everyday Mathematics Chapter 4


1
Everyday MathematicsChapter 4
  • Gwenanne Salkind
  • EDCI 856 Discussion Leadership

2
University of Chicago School Mathematics Project
  • Amoco Foundation (1983)
  • GTE Corporation
  • Everyday Learning Corporation
  • National Science Foundation (1993)

3
Everyday Mathematics Publication Dates
  • 1987 Kindergarten
  • 1989 First Grade
  • 1991 Second Grade
  • 1992 Third Grade
  • By 1996 Fourth-Sixth Grade

4
Principles for Development (p. 80)
  1. Children begin school with a great deal of
    mathematical knowledge.
  2. The elementary school mathematics curriculum
    should be broadened.
  3. Manipulatives are important tools in helping
    students represent mathematical situations
  4. Paper-and-pencil calculation is only one strand
    in a well-balanced curriculum.

5
Principles for Development
  1. The teacher and curriculum are important in
    providing a guide for learning important
    mathematics
  2. Mathematical questions and observations should be
    woven into daily classroom routines.
  3. Assessment should be ongoing and should match the
    types of activities in which students are
    engaged.
  4. Reforms should take into account the working
    lives of teachers.

6
Principles for Development
  • Do you agree with these principles?
  • Do any stand out for you in some way?
  • Is there anything missing?

7
Studies ofEveryday Mathematics
  • UCSMP Studies
  • The Third Grade Illinois State Test
  • Mental Computation and Number Sense of Fifth
    Graders
  • Geometric Knowledge of Fifth- and Sixth-Grade
    Students
  • Longitudinal Study
  • Multidigit Computation in Third Grade
  • School District Studies
  • Hopewell Valley Regional School District

8
The Third-Grade Illinois State Test (p. 84)
  • Illinois public schools (26 schools from 9
    suburban districts)
  • All third grade students who had used EM
  • Illinois Goal Assessment Program (IGAP)
  • Compared mean test scores to mean state scores
    and mean Cook County scores.

9
The Third-Grade Illinois State Test (p. 86)
  • Describe the results of the study
  • Consider
  • Mean score comparison
  • Low-income populations
  • State goals

10
Mental Computation and Number Sense of Fifth
Graders (p. 86)
  • 78 students in four fifth-grade classes who were
    using EM
  • Had used EM since kindergarten
  • 3 suburban, 1 urban
  • Compared to 250 students from a mental math study
    by Reys, Reys, Hope (1993)

11
Mental Computation and Number Sense of Fifth
Graders (p. 88)
  • 25 items
  • Range of mathematical operations and
    computational difficulty
  • Problems read orally or presented visually on an
    overhead
  • Calculations done mentally
  • 8 seconds to record answers on a narrow strip of
    paper

12
Mental Computation and Number Sense of Fifth
Graders (p. 89)
  • Look at table 4.1
  • Which questions were missed the most? Why? How
    would you solve the problems?
  • Which problems showed the greatest discrepancy
    between the two groups? Why? How would you solve
    the problems?

13
Geometric Knowledge of Fifth-and Sixth-Grade
Students (p. 90)
  • 6 classes using sixth-grade EM
  • 4 classes using fifth-grade EM
  • from 6 districts (4 Illinois, 1 Pennsylvania, 1
    Minnesota)
  • 3 suburban, 2 rural, 1 urban
  • All students used EM since K

14
Geometric Knowledge of Fifth-and Sixth-Grade
Students (p. 90)
  • Ten comparison classes
  • 6 at sixth grade
  • 4 at fifth grade
  • Matched the EM schools on location and
    socioeconomic status
  • Used traditional texts

15
Geometric Knowledge of Fifth-and Sixth-Grade
Students (p. 93)
  • Looking at Figure 4.6 on page 93. Notice that EM
    fifth-grade students outperformed the comparison
    sixth-grade students on both the pretest and the
    posttest.
  • Why do you think this occurred?

16
Longitudinal Study (p. 95)
  • Commissioned by NSF (1993)
  • Northwestern University
  • Began with 496 first-grade students who were
    using EM
  • Five school districts (Urban suburban Chicago,
    Rural district in Pennsylvania)
  • Schools planned on adopting EM K-5

17
Longitudinal Study (p. 96)
  • In the second year of the study EM second-grade
    students scored lower on standard computational
    problems when compared to Japanese second-grade
    students.
  • So, the researchers looked at multidigit
    computation in third grade the following year.

18
Longitudinal StudyMultidigit Computation in
Third Grade
  • Look at Table 4.3 on page 98.
  • Why do you think the EM group did not show a
    significantly higher difference on the standard
    computational problems when compared with the
    NAEP group? (Problems 3, 5, 6, 7)
  • What else do you notice about the results?

19
Hopewell Valley Regional School District Study
(p. 99)
  • 500 students in three schools
  • Compared fifth-grade students (1996) who had
    never used EM to fifth-grade students (1997) who
    had used EM since second grade
  • Two standardized tests
  • Comprehensive Testing Program (CTP III)
  • Metropolitan Achievement Test (MAT7)

20
Hopewell Valley Regional School District Study
(p. 102)
  • What were the results of the study?
  • What does Figure 4.8 tell us?

21
Conclusions
  • EM students perform as well as students in more
    traditional programs on traditional topics such
    as fact knowledge and paper-and-pencil
    computation.
  • EM students use a greater variety of
    computational solution methods
  • EM students are stronger on mental computation

22
Conclusions
  • EM students score substantially higher on
    non-traditional topics such as geometry,
    measurement, and data.
  • EM students perform better on questions that
    assess problem-solving, reasoning, and
    communication.

23
One Final Question
  • What further studies would you suggest?
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