Beyond Elementary: Examining Conceptual Demands of Division of Fractions in Current US Curricula

Presenter: Leanna Carollo (Education, Sociology)

Mentor: Juliet Baxter

Oral Presentation

Panel A: “Culture and Education” Maple Room

Concurrent Session 2: 10:30-11:45am

Facilitator: Nedzer Erilus

The Common Core State Standards of Mathematics (CCSSM), a set of US educational standards which were initially adopted in 2010 by 45 states, creates a more rigorous and coherent set of standards for American students, making elementary math anything but elementary. The adoption of these new standards formulates the research questions for this study: How well do current curricula match the CCSSM and how well do current curricula support teacher knowledge to implement the standards? Three evaluation tools helped to analyze division of fractions in three diverse curricula used in the United States: Prentice Hall, Singapore Math, and CK-12. These tools measure (a) the cognitive demands of the mathematical tasks in each curricula, (b) the mathematical coherency of an instructional unit, and (c) the resources in each curricula that support teachers’ understanding of mathematics. I find that Singapore Math’s problems reach higher-level cognitive demands more often than Prentice Hall and CK- 12. Prentice Hall and CK-12’s reliance on using the standard division algorithm inhibits conceptual thinking for both students and teachers. From a Curriculum Review Tool, which focuses on teacher knowledge, I find that Singapore Math is the closest to reach the division of fraction CCSSM compared to Prentice Hall and CK-12. Resource tools for teachers can be developed that better support students’ learning by combining characteristics from each curriculum such as word problems, manipulatives/pictures, and samples of students’ work.

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