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Table 4 Implementation of the Singapore Math
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TeachingSingaporeMath 2013 JBadger
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- Mean ITBS Percentile Ranking Among All Schools Grade 2 Grade 3 Grade 4 Grade 5 DATA COMPONENTS OF
Table 4
Implementation of the Singapore Math Curriculum, 2008-2010 An equivocal response is advanced to the research question concerning the influence of Singapore Math curriculum contributing to elementary teachers’ confidence and competence delivering mathematics. Survey data found no significant change in educators’ understanding of or confidence in mathematical concepts, either for educators at any individual grade level or for teachers considered as a whole group. Interview data collected from teachers and students as well as teachers’ journal reflections suggest that there is a growing interest in Singapore Math as it pertains to the Mean ITBS Percentile Ranking Among All Schools Grade 2 Grade 3 Grade 4 Grade 5 DATA COMPONENTS OF O’DONNELL’S MODEL (2008) FIDELITY OF CURRICULUM IMPLEMENTATION (FCI) Teacher Surveys Curriculum profile & curriculum-in- use Moderately strong fidelity (+FCI) Teacher Journals Curriculum profile & adaptation Marginally strong fidelity (-/+FCI) Teacher & Administrator Interviews Curriculum profile & adaptation Moderately strong fidelity (+FCI) Classroom Observations Teaching & curriculum-in- use Marginally strong fidelity (-/+FCI) Student Achievement Results Curriculum-in- use Strong fidelity (++FCI) GATEways to Teacher Education A journal of the Georgia Association of Teacher Educators VOLUME 14, ISSUE 1 PAGE 37 integration of manipulatives, conceptual development through bar modeling and number disks, hands-on activities, and real-life applications. Teachers’ journals revealed instructional areas that county and school administrators could target through training and ongoing support to cultivate instruction and strategies to foster student learning. Principals as well as teachers expressed interest in the integration of manipulatives, bar modeling strategies, number disks, and real life applications of Singapore Math, a small number of elementary educators were not receptive to the curriculum or strategies for teaching mathematics. Classroom observations revealed a large percentage of time devoted to teacher- centered instruction, possibly reflective of teachers’ developing understanding of the new curriculum. Founded on an extensive review of efficacy and effectiveness studies, O’Donnell’s (2008) conceptualization of fidelity of K-12 core curriculum implementation acknowledges student achievement results as well as curriculum potential, teaching, curriculum-in- use, and adaptation. Qualitative data provided insights into the first research question concerning how the new mathematics curriculum was implemented by elementary teachers. Participating teachers identified workshops and professional development sessions as important occasions that provided knowledge and strategies when delivering the curriculum in the first and second year of implementation. Classroom observations in Kindergarten to Grade 5 revealed elementary teachers delivering the Singapore Math curriculum through extensive explanations of mathematical concepts, describing curriculum- specific vocabulary, and reviewing problem-sets as a class. There was a discrepancy, however, between teachers’ stated claims during interviews of how lessons were communicated and actual classroom practices observed. Classroom teachers’ focus on the pictorial and concrete, with intermittent attention devoted to student-centered application of abstract mathematical concepts and extension to real- world problems, raise questions related to fidelity of implementation. Accountability pressures, time constraints, and elementary teachers’ developing understanding of the new mathematics curriculum may explain why the curriculum was delivered with a prevalence of teacher-centered instruction rather than integrating more opportunities for student-centered learning as well as a preponderance of concrete and pictorial concepts at the expense of abstract concepts. Addressing these inconsistent instructional approaches could be taken up through targeted training sessions to differentiate the new curriculum for English language learners. If teachers can learn to leverage these teaching strategies by encouraging students to explore the less familiar exercises and by guiding students’ thinking through appropriate questioning strategies, educators may be more effective cultivating students’ independent thinking and conceptual understanding of mathematics. Permitting students to develop the important skill of problem solving requires less teacher- centered instruction and more independent student effort or collaboration to discover solutions to mathematical questions. Further, when educators allow, in a supportive environment, all learners – including underachieving students – to get frustrated by mathematics, it can lead to dramatically improved achievement and test scores as well as increased student confidence and engagement (Stigler & Hiebert, 1999; Yeung, 2009). Download 272.23 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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