This document analyzes a 6th grade mathematics module called "Building a Fish Rack" that is part of a larger culturally-based mathematics curriculum. The module uses the cultural practice of constructing fish racks among the Yup'ik people of Alaska as a context for teaching mathematical concepts of perimeter, area, and geometry. The analysis discusses how the module addresses goals of multicultural education by (1) raising mathematics achievement for all students, (2) providing access to rigorous mathematics content, and (3) using an ethnomathematical approach that engages students through a culturally relevant context. Research on the module shows improved mathematics outcomes for students compared to a traditional curriculum.
The document analyzes a 6th grade mathematics module called "Building a Fish Rack" that teaches concepts of proof, properties, perimeter, and area in a culturally relevant context. The module uses the traditional Yup'ik practice of building fish racks to dry salmon. Students learn about the form and function of fish racks, and explore the underlying mathematics through activities like using ropes to measure diagonals and ensure a rectangular base. The module addresses multicultural education themes like raising mathematics achievement, improving access to high-level math, using ethnomathematics, and connecting math to students' lives. Studies found this culturally-based approach improved math scores more than traditional curricula.
This document analyzes a 6th grade mathematics module that incorporates Yup'ik culture and addresses goals of multicultural education. The module teaches concepts of proof, properties, perimeter, and area through having students model and analyze the construction of traditional Yup'ik fish racks. Analyzing the module shows how it connects mathematics learning to an authentic cultural activity, allowing Alaska Native students to learn in a culturally meaningful way while meeting state standards. Research found such culturally-based modules improved mathematics achievement for all students, especially Alaska Natives.
This document outlines the conceptual framework and curriculum guide for mathematics education in the Philippines from Kindergarten to Grade 10. The goals of mathematics education are developing critical thinking and problem solving skills. The curriculum covers 5 content areas - numbers, measurement, geometry, patterns and algebra, and probability and statistics. It is grounded in theories of experiential learning, reflective learning, constructivism, cooperative learning, and discovery learning. The curriculum guide describes the learning standards and expectations for each key stage of learning.
This document summarizes a study that assessed how two teacher training programs addressed cultural diversity in mathematics instruction. Classroom observations found one class had little student interaction and was teacher-centered, while the other encouraged high student participation. Both programs' curricula embraced diversity but did not sufficiently address dismantling dominant cultural practices or empowering minority students. The study indicates teacher educators' theoretical framework on multiculturalism determines the nature of exposure pre-service teachers receive regarding culturally affirming mathematics instruction.
Teaching STEM inclusive of Indigenous knowledges and perspectivesDavid Haberlah
Short presentation discussing the Australian Curriculum and school policy framework in relation to culturally-responsive curriculum content and pedagogies inclusive of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders knowledges and perspectives for the subject areas Science, Technologies and Mathematics
This document summarizes the research areas and activities of the Research in Didactics of Mathematics faculty at one university. It discusses several key areas of focus, including teachers' beliefs about mathematics teaching and learning, proof and proving in school mathematics, textbook research, and the development of mathematical knowledge. It provides an overview of faculty members and PhD students working in these areas, as well as summaries of recent publications and current projects related to mathematics education research.
Assessment of mathematics textbooks potential in terms of student’s motivatio...Alexander Decker
The document analyzes mathematics textbooks used in grades 6-9 in Kosovo in terms of their potential to motivate students and enhance comprehension. Two methods are used - Rivers matrix and Skovsmose's learning milieus. The Rivers matrix finds textbooks lack factors like historical notes, biographies, and real-world applications that motivate students. Most examples are abstract with few real-life connections. Tasks are also largely disconnected from real contexts. The textbooks have a logic-focused philosophy with little attention to engaging students or connecting to their experiences. Overall, the analysis finds the textbooks provide limited support for motivation and comprehension.
Re-framing Education as a Thirdspace: Neonarratives of Pedagogy, Power and Tr...Janice K. Jones
Dr Janice K. Jones discusses the conduct and outcomes of her narrative autoethnographic participatory research in a non-traditional and play based learning context in rural Australia, and considers implications for policies and practices of education arising from
The document analyzes a 6th grade mathematics module called "Building a Fish Rack" that teaches concepts of proof, properties, perimeter, and area in a culturally relevant context. The module uses the traditional Yup'ik practice of building fish racks to dry salmon. Students learn about the form and function of fish racks, and explore the underlying mathematics through activities like using ropes to measure diagonals and ensure a rectangular base. The module addresses multicultural education themes like raising mathematics achievement, improving access to high-level math, using ethnomathematics, and connecting math to students' lives. Studies found this culturally-based approach improved math scores more than traditional curricula.
This document analyzes a 6th grade mathematics module that incorporates Yup'ik culture and addresses goals of multicultural education. The module teaches concepts of proof, properties, perimeter, and area through having students model and analyze the construction of traditional Yup'ik fish racks. Analyzing the module shows how it connects mathematics learning to an authentic cultural activity, allowing Alaska Native students to learn in a culturally meaningful way while meeting state standards. Research found such culturally-based modules improved mathematics achievement for all students, especially Alaska Natives.
This document outlines the conceptual framework and curriculum guide for mathematics education in the Philippines from Kindergarten to Grade 10. The goals of mathematics education are developing critical thinking and problem solving skills. The curriculum covers 5 content areas - numbers, measurement, geometry, patterns and algebra, and probability and statistics. It is grounded in theories of experiential learning, reflective learning, constructivism, cooperative learning, and discovery learning. The curriculum guide describes the learning standards and expectations for each key stage of learning.
This document summarizes a study that assessed how two teacher training programs addressed cultural diversity in mathematics instruction. Classroom observations found one class had little student interaction and was teacher-centered, while the other encouraged high student participation. Both programs' curricula embraced diversity but did not sufficiently address dismantling dominant cultural practices or empowering minority students. The study indicates teacher educators' theoretical framework on multiculturalism determines the nature of exposure pre-service teachers receive regarding culturally affirming mathematics instruction.
Teaching STEM inclusive of Indigenous knowledges and perspectivesDavid Haberlah
Short presentation discussing the Australian Curriculum and school policy framework in relation to culturally-responsive curriculum content and pedagogies inclusive of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders knowledges and perspectives for the subject areas Science, Technologies and Mathematics
This document summarizes the research areas and activities of the Research in Didactics of Mathematics faculty at one university. It discusses several key areas of focus, including teachers' beliefs about mathematics teaching and learning, proof and proving in school mathematics, textbook research, and the development of mathematical knowledge. It provides an overview of faculty members and PhD students working in these areas, as well as summaries of recent publications and current projects related to mathematics education research.
Assessment of mathematics textbooks potential in terms of student’s motivatio...Alexander Decker
The document analyzes mathematics textbooks used in grades 6-9 in Kosovo in terms of their potential to motivate students and enhance comprehension. Two methods are used - Rivers matrix and Skovsmose's learning milieus. The Rivers matrix finds textbooks lack factors like historical notes, biographies, and real-world applications that motivate students. Most examples are abstract with few real-life connections. Tasks are also largely disconnected from real contexts. The textbooks have a logic-focused philosophy with little attention to engaging students or connecting to their experiences. Overall, the analysis finds the textbooks provide limited support for motivation and comprehension.
Re-framing Education as a Thirdspace: Neonarratives of Pedagogy, Power and Tr...Janice K. Jones
Dr Janice K. Jones discusses the conduct and outcomes of her narrative autoethnographic participatory research in a non-traditional and play based learning context in rural Australia, and considers implications for policies and practices of education arising from
This document summarizes research on early childhood education in Estonia. It provides a brief history of early childhood education in Estonia dating back to 1840. It then describes the current state of early childhood teacher education programs and preschool institutions in Estonia. The document also summarizes several studies that have been conducted on topics like teacher professionalism, the quality of learning environments, and the values of teachers, principals, and parents in early childhood education in Estonia.
This document discusses pedagogy of mathematics at the primary level. It emphasizes developing numeracy skills in a stress-free environment through learner-friendly methods. At the primary level, teaching mathematics requires expertise in both subject knowledge and skills. Lessons should focus on engaging children through manipulation of concrete objects. A sequence of providing experiences, developing language skills, pictorial representation, use of symbols, and integrating other subjects is recommended. At the upper primary level, mathematics requires balancing abstract concepts and real-life contexts. Teachers must use participatory methods like problem-posing and -solving to make mathematics enjoyable.
This document provides an overview of a module on the pedagogy of science for upper primary school teachers. It discusses the objectives of learning science, definitions of science, curricular expectations, and learning outcomes for classes 6-8. It emphasizes using activities, experiments, and local contexts to facilitate students' conceptual understanding and inquiry skills. Suggestions for pedagogical processes include exploration, questioning, recording observations, analyzing data, and developing values like cooperation. Examples from science textbooks demonstrate how to integrate learning outcomes into classroom lessons using locally available materials. The module aims to help teachers effectively teach science concepts and develop scientific temper in upper primary students.
Science cg with tagged sci equipment revisedMardy Gabot
The document is the K to 12 Science Curriculum Guide published by the Department of Education of the Philippines in August 2016. It lays out the conceptual framework, standards, and learning outcomes for science education from Kindergarten to Grade 12. The goals are to develop scientific literacy, technological skills, and environmentally responsible values to allow students to be productive citizens and make informed decisions. It emphasizes hands-on, inquiry-based learning across disciplines and real-world problem solving to foster understanding and application of core concepts in a spiral progression of complexity.
The document provides an overview of teaching Social Sciences at the upper primary level in India. It discusses:
1) The goals of Social Sciences education which are to promote human values, critical thinking about social issues, and an understanding of history, geography, economics and political science.
2) The subjects taught at upper primary level - Geography, History, Political Science and Economics - and key concepts within each subject.
3) Suggested pedagogical approaches for each class like using maps, timelines and case studies in History, and field visits and interviews for Geography and Economics.
4) The intended learning outcomes which are knowledge, skills and attitudes around social, political and economic issues across
This document summarizes a PhD research panel presentation about examining teacher identities in relation to teaching children with dyslexia in Greek primary schools. The research aims to understand how teacher identities relate to their approaches to inclusion of dyslexic students. It will use concept mapping interviews and case studies to analyze teacher perspectives and the relationship between identity and pedagogical practices. The study aims to contribute new understandings about teacher identities and inclusion of dyslexic students in the Greek educational context.
S1 SCIENCE EDUCATION AND GUIDANCE IN SCHOOLS: THE WAY FORWARD 10.00 di fabioprogettoacariss
This document discusses guidance and career counseling for the promotion of scientific talents. It notes that numerous educational initiatives have been implemented to encourage students' interest in STEM fields, but that attention must also be paid to gifted students. Effective science enrichment programs incorporate inquiry-based learning, scaffolding, and cognitive apprenticeship. They have been shown to increase science knowledge and achievement for general students as well as female and gifted students. However, factors like gender stereotypes, lack of role models, and family influences have contributed to a science gender gap. Guidance interventions should provide career information, counseling, and opportunities for dialogue to help students construct their careers, with a focus on reducing stereotypes.
Dr. Anthony Rickard, www.nationalforum.com
In June 2008, Dr. Kritsonis received the Doctor of Humane Letters, School of Graduate Studies from Southern Christian University. The ceremony was held at the Hilton Hotel in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Algebra Problem-Solving Equity ChallengesMartha Brown
This document summarizes a study that examined how "Algebra Problem-Solving Equity Challenge (APSEC) activities" impacted preservice teachers' awareness of teaching algebra in diverse classrooms. 35 preservice teachers completed surveys before and after participating in 4 APSEC activities. The activities focused on identifying student misconceptions, making word problems culturally relevant, and planning lessons for diverse students. Analyses found the activities improved participants' understanding of these areas and how to address student questions. A key finding was that working with misconceptions may help teach algebra in an equitable way.
This document provides a critical appraisal of the secondary level mathematics curriculum in Kerala, India. It discusses the importance of mathematics based on national education policies and frameworks. The National Curriculum Framework (NCF) 2005 and Kerala Curriculum Framework (KCF) 2007 emphasize developing students' ability to think mathematically and solving problems. However, many students struggle with mathematics and consider it difficult. The document analyzes whether deficiencies in the current secondary curriculum contribute to these difficulties, and how well the curriculum aligns with NCF and KCF guidelines, with a focus on high school mathematics textbooks. Suggestions are provided to address limitations and improve the curriculum.
This document provides an overview of the field of mathematics education from multiple perspectives. It discusses the complex nature of mathematics as both a product of abstraction and a creative process. Mathematics education aims to develop students' mathematical dispositions and ability to assess real-world mathematizations. Research in mathematics education reflects the diversity of perspectives and uses qualitative methods to study learning from individual and social-cultural views. The goals of research are to advance knowledge and practice while addressing issues of complexity, perspective, and standards of inquiry in this dynamic field.
This document provides an overview of the field of mathematics education from multiple perspectives. It discusses the complex nature of mathematics as both a product of abstraction and a creative process. Mathematics education aims to develop students' mathematical dispositions and ability to assess real-world mathematizations. Research in mathematics education reflects the diversity of perspectives and uses qualitative methods to study learning from individual and social-cultural views. The goals of research are to advance knowledge and practice while addressing issues of complexity, diversity and communication across perspectives.
The document compares and contrasts didactics of mathematics and mathematics education through comparative charts provided by multiple authors. Didactics of mathematics focuses on identifying and understanding phenomena related to teaching and learning mathematics, while mathematics education includes the broader field of teaching, learning, and researching mathematics. Both fields aim to improve the learning and understanding of mathematical concepts but do so through different approaches and areas of focus.
This document discusses models of curriculum integration. It defines integrated curriculum as connecting different subject areas through themes, topics or problems. Three main models are described: interdisciplinary, problem-based, and theme-based. The interdisciplinary model groups subjects into blocks of time allowing for flexibility. The problem-based model centers on solving technological problems that require multiple subject areas. The theme-based model organizes subjects around an overarching theme. Implications of integrated curriculum include shifting to a more constructivist approach, extensive teacher training, and systemic reforms.
This document outlines the goals, framework, and structure of the revised Grades 1-10 Mathematics curriculum in the Philippines. The main goal is for learners to become mathematically proficient and critical problem solvers. The curriculum framework focuses on three facilitating facets - content, skills, and disposition - supported by pedagogy, assessment, and resources. The curriculum structure is built around 12 "Big Ideas" that connect mathematical concepts across grade levels through a developmental sequence and vertical/horizontal articulation.
This document describes a research project that aims to enhance mathematics learning outcomes for freshman minority college students. The project will train students to develop personal learning environments using social media tools and extended learning communities. Students will be placed into groups of 3-5 to share notes, learn from each other, and present their understanding of weekly lessons. The goal is to increase engagement and help students apply mathematical concepts, as many struggle with the transition from high school to college-level mathematics. Preliminary findings suggest this approach improves students' learning environment and opportunities to understand mathematics in more visual and interactive ways.
This document discusses pedagogy for transferring mathematics learning from school to the workplace. It begins by defining numeracy and noting how definitions emphasize understanding mathematics in real-world contexts and as a tool for communication. The document then reviews different views of the nature of mathematics and how these influence teaching practices. It argues that developing numerate learners requires shifting curricula from views of mathematics as facts and skills to seeing it as problem-solving arising from human inquiry. A second theme is functional mathematics, which aims to bridge the gap between school and out-of-school mathematics by focusing on areas inherent to employment. The document aims to examine how curriculum and teaching can better serve the needs of students and other stakeholders in transferring meaningful mathematics learning
Difficulty levels of topics in the new senior secondary school mathematics cu...Alexander Decker
This document summarizes a study that examined mathematics teachers' perceptions of difficulty levels of topics in Nigeria's new senior secondary school mathematics curriculum. The study found:
1) Teachers perceived newly added topics like modular arithmetic, coordinate geometry, differentiation, and integration as very difficult. Existing topics were mostly perceived as easy or averagely difficult.
2) There were no significant differences found in perceived difficulty based on teachers' gender, academic qualifications, professional qualifications, or years of experience.
3) It was recommended that teachers be provided training through workshops and seminars on the new topics, as well as relevant teaching materials to help them effectively teach the revised curriculum.
The document discusses mathematics education in the Philippines and how it has been impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. It reviews literature on localization of instructional materials, game-based learning, and learning activity sheets. The goal is to develop localized game-based learning activity sheets for mathematics to motivate students and maintain their interest during remote learning. Teachers should continue developing activities based on their students' context and available materials to promote meaningful learning.
Monitoring The Status Of Students' Journey Towards Science And Mathematics Li...noblex1
A major focus of the current mathematics and science education reforms is on developing "literacy;" that is, helping students to understand and use the languages and ideas of mathematics and science in reasoning, communicating, and solving problems. In many ways, these standards documents are far more voluminous and complex than any scope and sequence in place in school systems today. But these documents are meant to be used as frameworks which provide guidance in education reform - they are not the definitive sources articulating to teachers how education reform must occur in their classrooms.
Our plan in this discussion is to lay out the components of mathematics and science literacy as set down in the major reform documents and then, using selected how-to articles, to show how strategies and activities tried by math and science teachers have been used, or can be used, to promote math and science literacy among students. For pragmatic reasons only, our discussions often focus either on mathematics or science reform recommendations and examples. In doing this, we do not mean to imply that the elements of literacy in these disciplines are somehow separate or different. In fact, the separate discussions show how both the mathematics and science education communities, coming from different directions at different points in time, independently arrived at similar positions and many of the same recommendations regarding the ideas of literacy.
In support of this discussion of the components of literacy, we also provide samples of resources, materials, and services that teachers might find useful in promoting mathematics and science literacy in their classrooms. The how-to articles are meant to be quick-reads that can be applied or adapted to classrooms directly. These articles are included to make it easier to decide which ones might be of special interest. Other articles and documents are intended as sources of a more general background. These documents provide some of the research bases and rationales behind some of the reform recommendations. Finally, we have included other references and information on databases which are not directly cited in the discussion but might prove valuable as additional sources of classroom ideas.
During the last decade, the mathematics education community appeared to lack clear focus and a sense of direction. Although many conferences were held, papers written, and reports produced, there was not a general consensus regarding which direction mathematics education should head.
The Standards offer an organization of important mathematical topics and abilities by grade-level groups (Kindergarten - grade 4, grades 5 - 8, and grades 9 - 12). Throughout the Standards the emphasis is: "knowing" mathematics is "doing" mathematics.
Source: https://ebookschoice.com/monitoring-the-status-of-students-journey-towards-science-and-mathematics-literacy/
This document summarizes research on early childhood education in Estonia. It provides a brief history of early childhood education in Estonia dating back to 1840. It then describes the current state of early childhood teacher education programs and preschool institutions in Estonia. The document also summarizes several studies that have been conducted on topics like teacher professionalism, the quality of learning environments, and the values of teachers, principals, and parents in early childhood education in Estonia.
This document discusses pedagogy of mathematics at the primary level. It emphasizes developing numeracy skills in a stress-free environment through learner-friendly methods. At the primary level, teaching mathematics requires expertise in both subject knowledge and skills. Lessons should focus on engaging children through manipulation of concrete objects. A sequence of providing experiences, developing language skills, pictorial representation, use of symbols, and integrating other subjects is recommended. At the upper primary level, mathematics requires balancing abstract concepts and real-life contexts. Teachers must use participatory methods like problem-posing and -solving to make mathematics enjoyable.
This document provides an overview of a module on the pedagogy of science for upper primary school teachers. It discusses the objectives of learning science, definitions of science, curricular expectations, and learning outcomes for classes 6-8. It emphasizes using activities, experiments, and local contexts to facilitate students' conceptual understanding and inquiry skills. Suggestions for pedagogical processes include exploration, questioning, recording observations, analyzing data, and developing values like cooperation. Examples from science textbooks demonstrate how to integrate learning outcomes into classroom lessons using locally available materials. The module aims to help teachers effectively teach science concepts and develop scientific temper in upper primary students.
Science cg with tagged sci equipment revisedMardy Gabot
The document is the K to 12 Science Curriculum Guide published by the Department of Education of the Philippines in August 2016. It lays out the conceptual framework, standards, and learning outcomes for science education from Kindergarten to Grade 12. The goals are to develop scientific literacy, technological skills, and environmentally responsible values to allow students to be productive citizens and make informed decisions. It emphasizes hands-on, inquiry-based learning across disciplines and real-world problem solving to foster understanding and application of core concepts in a spiral progression of complexity.
The document provides an overview of teaching Social Sciences at the upper primary level in India. It discusses:
1) The goals of Social Sciences education which are to promote human values, critical thinking about social issues, and an understanding of history, geography, economics and political science.
2) The subjects taught at upper primary level - Geography, History, Political Science and Economics - and key concepts within each subject.
3) Suggested pedagogical approaches for each class like using maps, timelines and case studies in History, and field visits and interviews for Geography and Economics.
4) The intended learning outcomes which are knowledge, skills and attitudes around social, political and economic issues across
This document summarizes a PhD research panel presentation about examining teacher identities in relation to teaching children with dyslexia in Greek primary schools. The research aims to understand how teacher identities relate to their approaches to inclusion of dyslexic students. It will use concept mapping interviews and case studies to analyze teacher perspectives and the relationship between identity and pedagogical practices. The study aims to contribute new understandings about teacher identities and inclusion of dyslexic students in the Greek educational context.
S1 SCIENCE EDUCATION AND GUIDANCE IN SCHOOLS: THE WAY FORWARD 10.00 di fabioprogettoacariss
This document discusses guidance and career counseling for the promotion of scientific talents. It notes that numerous educational initiatives have been implemented to encourage students' interest in STEM fields, but that attention must also be paid to gifted students. Effective science enrichment programs incorporate inquiry-based learning, scaffolding, and cognitive apprenticeship. They have been shown to increase science knowledge and achievement for general students as well as female and gifted students. However, factors like gender stereotypes, lack of role models, and family influences have contributed to a science gender gap. Guidance interventions should provide career information, counseling, and opportunities for dialogue to help students construct their careers, with a focus on reducing stereotypes.
Dr. Anthony Rickard, www.nationalforum.com
In June 2008, Dr. Kritsonis received the Doctor of Humane Letters, School of Graduate Studies from Southern Christian University. The ceremony was held at the Hilton Hotel in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Algebra Problem-Solving Equity ChallengesMartha Brown
This document summarizes a study that examined how "Algebra Problem-Solving Equity Challenge (APSEC) activities" impacted preservice teachers' awareness of teaching algebra in diverse classrooms. 35 preservice teachers completed surveys before and after participating in 4 APSEC activities. The activities focused on identifying student misconceptions, making word problems culturally relevant, and planning lessons for diverse students. Analyses found the activities improved participants' understanding of these areas and how to address student questions. A key finding was that working with misconceptions may help teach algebra in an equitable way.
This document provides a critical appraisal of the secondary level mathematics curriculum in Kerala, India. It discusses the importance of mathematics based on national education policies and frameworks. The National Curriculum Framework (NCF) 2005 and Kerala Curriculum Framework (KCF) 2007 emphasize developing students' ability to think mathematically and solving problems. However, many students struggle with mathematics and consider it difficult. The document analyzes whether deficiencies in the current secondary curriculum contribute to these difficulties, and how well the curriculum aligns with NCF and KCF guidelines, with a focus on high school mathematics textbooks. Suggestions are provided to address limitations and improve the curriculum.
This document provides an overview of the field of mathematics education from multiple perspectives. It discusses the complex nature of mathematics as both a product of abstraction and a creative process. Mathematics education aims to develop students' mathematical dispositions and ability to assess real-world mathematizations. Research in mathematics education reflects the diversity of perspectives and uses qualitative methods to study learning from individual and social-cultural views. The goals of research are to advance knowledge and practice while addressing issues of complexity, perspective, and standards of inquiry in this dynamic field.
This document provides an overview of the field of mathematics education from multiple perspectives. It discusses the complex nature of mathematics as both a product of abstraction and a creative process. Mathematics education aims to develop students' mathematical dispositions and ability to assess real-world mathematizations. Research in mathematics education reflects the diversity of perspectives and uses qualitative methods to study learning from individual and social-cultural views. The goals of research are to advance knowledge and practice while addressing issues of complexity, diversity and communication across perspectives.
The document compares and contrasts didactics of mathematics and mathematics education through comparative charts provided by multiple authors. Didactics of mathematics focuses on identifying and understanding phenomena related to teaching and learning mathematics, while mathematics education includes the broader field of teaching, learning, and researching mathematics. Both fields aim to improve the learning and understanding of mathematical concepts but do so through different approaches and areas of focus.
This document discusses models of curriculum integration. It defines integrated curriculum as connecting different subject areas through themes, topics or problems. Three main models are described: interdisciplinary, problem-based, and theme-based. The interdisciplinary model groups subjects into blocks of time allowing for flexibility. The problem-based model centers on solving technological problems that require multiple subject areas. The theme-based model organizes subjects around an overarching theme. Implications of integrated curriculum include shifting to a more constructivist approach, extensive teacher training, and systemic reforms.
This document outlines the goals, framework, and structure of the revised Grades 1-10 Mathematics curriculum in the Philippines. The main goal is for learners to become mathematically proficient and critical problem solvers. The curriculum framework focuses on three facilitating facets - content, skills, and disposition - supported by pedagogy, assessment, and resources. The curriculum structure is built around 12 "Big Ideas" that connect mathematical concepts across grade levels through a developmental sequence and vertical/horizontal articulation.
This document describes a research project that aims to enhance mathematics learning outcomes for freshman minority college students. The project will train students to develop personal learning environments using social media tools and extended learning communities. Students will be placed into groups of 3-5 to share notes, learn from each other, and present their understanding of weekly lessons. The goal is to increase engagement and help students apply mathematical concepts, as many struggle with the transition from high school to college-level mathematics. Preliminary findings suggest this approach improves students' learning environment and opportunities to understand mathematics in more visual and interactive ways.
This document discusses pedagogy for transferring mathematics learning from school to the workplace. It begins by defining numeracy and noting how definitions emphasize understanding mathematics in real-world contexts and as a tool for communication. The document then reviews different views of the nature of mathematics and how these influence teaching practices. It argues that developing numerate learners requires shifting curricula from views of mathematics as facts and skills to seeing it as problem-solving arising from human inquiry. A second theme is functional mathematics, which aims to bridge the gap between school and out-of-school mathematics by focusing on areas inherent to employment. The document aims to examine how curriculum and teaching can better serve the needs of students and other stakeholders in transferring meaningful mathematics learning
Difficulty levels of topics in the new senior secondary school mathematics cu...Alexander Decker
This document summarizes a study that examined mathematics teachers' perceptions of difficulty levels of topics in Nigeria's new senior secondary school mathematics curriculum. The study found:
1) Teachers perceived newly added topics like modular arithmetic, coordinate geometry, differentiation, and integration as very difficult. Existing topics were mostly perceived as easy or averagely difficult.
2) There were no significant differences found in perceived difficulty based on teachers' gender, academic qualifications, professional qualifications, or years of experience.
3) It was recommended that teachers be provided training through workshops and seminars on the new topics, as well as relevant teaching materials to help them effectively teach the revised curriculum.
The document discusses mathematics education in the Philippines and how it has been impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. It reviews literature on localization of instructional materials, game-based learning, and learning activity sheets. The goal is to develop localized game-based learning activity sheets for mathematics to motivate students and maintain their interest during remote learning. Teachers should continue developing activities based on their students' context and available materials to promote meaningful learning.
Monitoring The Status Of Students' Journey Towards Science And Mathematics Li...noblex1
A major focus of the current mathematics and science education reforms is on developing "literacy;" that is, helping students to understand and use the languages and ideas of mathematics and science in reasoning, communicating, and solving problems. In many ways, these standards documents are far more voluminous and complex than any scope and sequence in place in school systems today. But these documents are meant to be used as frameworks which provide guidance in education reform - they are not the definitive sources articulating to teachers how education reform must occur in their classrooms.
Our plan in this discussion is to lay out the components of mathematics and science literacy as set down in the major reform documents and then, using selected how-to articles, to show how strategies and activities tried by math and science teachers have been used, or can be used, to promote math and science literacy among students. For pragmatic reasons only, our discussions often focus either on mathematics or science reform recommendations and examples. In doing this, we do not mean to imply that the elements of literacy in these disciplines are somehow separate or different. In fact, the separate discussions show how both the mathematics and science education communities, coming from different directions at different points in time, independently arrived at similar positions and many of the same recommendations regarding the ideas of literacy.
In support of this discussion of the components of literacy, we also provide samples of resources, materials, and services that teachers might find useful in promoting mathematics and science literacy in their classrooms. The how-to articles are meant to be quick-reads that can be applied or adapted to classrooms directly. These articles are included to make it easier to decide which ones might be of special interest. Other articles and documents are intended as sources of a more general background. These documents provide some of the research bases and rationales behind some of the reform recommendations. Finally, we have included other references and information on databases which are not directly cited in the discussion but might prove valuable as additional sources of classroom ideas.
During the last decade, the mathematics education community appeared to lack clear focus and a sense of direction. Although many conferences were held, papers written, and reports produced, there was not a general consensus regarding which direction mathematics education should head.
The Standards offer an organization of important mathematical topics and abilities by grade-level groups (Kindergarten - grade 4, grades 5 - 8, and grades 9 - 12). Throughout the Standards the emphasis is: "knowing" mathematics is "doing" mathematics.
Source: https://ebookschoice.com/monitoring-the-status-of-students-journey-towards-science-and-mathematics-literacy/
Ethnomathematics and Academic Performance of Senior Secondary Students in Mat...ijtsrd
The study investigated ethnomathematics and academic performance of senior secondary students in mathematics in Rivers State Nigeria. Two thousand four hundred and eleven 2411 senior secondary two SS2 mathematics students in twenty one 21 co educational public secondary schools in EmohuaLocal Government Area of Rivers State Nigeria served as the populations of this study. Two of these schools with a sample of 138 mathematics students were randomly assigned experimental condition n=72 and control condition n=66 their intact classes were utilized. The study utilizeda non randomized pretest, post test quasi experimental research design. The research instrument for data collection was Mathematics Performance Test MPT . MPT reliability was ascertained using Pearson Product Moment Correlation, r=0.78 was obtained. Mean scores and standard deviation were used to answer the research questions whereas Analysis of Covariance ANCOVA was used to test for significance of the null hypotheses at 0.05 alpha level. The result showed that the ethnomathematics method of instruction was more effective than the problem solving method in facilitating students understanding of mathematics, gender had no effect statistically. The study recommended, among others that mathematics teachers should employ the ethnomathematics method of instruction during mathematics instructions. Woji Michael | Charles-Ogan Gladys "Ethnomathematics and Academic Performance of Senior Secondary Students in Mathematics in Rivers State, Nigeria" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-6 | Issue-2 , February 2022, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd49383.pdf Paper URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/mathemetics/applied-mathamatics/49383/ethnomathematics-and-academic-performance-of-senior-secondary-students-in-mathematics-in-rivers-state-nigeria/woji-michael
This document discusses developing a pedagogy of confidence and care for teaching mathematics to emergent bilingual students. It proposes creating a mathematics classroom discourse community where teachers build their disciplinary linguistic knowledge and students engage in collective problem solving using multimodal representations. The goal is for teachers to understand students' mathematical thinking and position students as capable learners through challenging problems and valuing their language use.
This document provides curriculum specifications for mathematics for Form 5 in Malaysian secondary schools. It includes an introduction outlining the aims and objectives of mathematics education in Malaysia, which are to develop students' mathematical thinking and problem-solving skills to prepare them for daily life challenges. The document also outlines the content organization and emphasizes problem-solving, communication, and using technology in teaching mathematics. It provides learning area outlines with objectives, activities, outcomes, notes, and vocabulary for teachers.
National council of teachers of mathematicsLaili Leli
The National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) is the largest mathematics education organization in North America. It was founded in 1920 and now has over 80,000 members. NCTM publishes influential standards and journals related to mathematics education. It aims to improve mathematics education for all students through research, teaching resources, and professional development.
Social Studies Teachers' Proclivities to Teach World History in the New K to ...Reynaldo Inocian
This document summarizes a study that assessed social studies teachers' readiness to teach world history in the new K-12 curriculum in the Philippines. It administered questionnaires to teachers about their learning styles based on Ned Hermann's brain quadrants theory. It observed their participation in training workshops and teaching demonstrations. The study found that the teachers' proclivities to teach world history before and during the training were consistent with their classroom performance. It generated themes around the teachers' values and commitments that will help with successful K-12 implementation. The document also provides context on the scope of world history in the K-12 curriculum and how it can be taught contextually while maintaining quality.
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Rickard, anthony analysis of a culturally based sixth grade mathematics module nfmij v7 n1 2010
1. NATIONAL FORUM OF MULTICULTURAL ISSUES JOURNAL
VOLUME 7, NUMBER 1, 2010
Analysis of a Culturally Based Sixth Grade
Mathematics Module: Addressing Multicultural
Education in School Mathematics
Anthony Rickard, PhD
Professor of Mathematics Education
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, School of Education
University of Alaska Fairbanks
Fairbanks, AK
ABSTRACT
Multicultural education should play an important role in the school mathematics
curriculum. Culturally based school mathematics curricula are one vehicle to
support implementation of multicultural education and school mathematics reform
in classrooms. However, few examples of culturally based school mathematics
curriculum have been analyzed to demonstrate how such curricula can incorporate
key goals of multicultural education and address the recommendations of the
National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM). This paper unpacks a sixth
grade mathematics module that is both culturally based and standards based. The
module is analyzed to show how it employs multiple themes that connect
multicultural education to teaching and learning school mathematics. This analysis
demonstrates how rigorous, standards based mathematics can also address key
goals of multicultural education.
Introduction
Teaching must start from students’ life experiences, not the teachers’ life
experiences or the experiences necessary to fit into the dominant school culture
(Gollnick & Chinn, 1998, pp. 306-307).
… [A]ll children, including those who have been traditionally underserved, can
learn mathematics when they have access to high-quality instructional programs
that support their learning (NCTM, 2000, p. 14).
There is broad consensus within the mathematics education community that
equity and addressing multiple facets of diversity in school mathematics (e.g., learning
2. NATIONAL FORUM OF MULTICULTURAL ISSUES JOURNAL
2____________________________________________________________________________________
styles, culture, race, gender, language) is central to reform of school mathematics and to
provide high quality mathematics curriculum and teaching and learning for all students
(NCTM, 2000). Implementing multicultural education in mathematics classrooms is one
way to address diversity and equity for K-12 students (Croom, 1997) and standards based
mathematics curricula have sought to address multicultural education to varying degrees
(Legaspi & Rickard, 2005). While growing evidence suggests that culturally-based
mathematics lessons or activities can help all students learn mathematics, even if the
students are not necessarily from the culture the lessons or activities are drawn from (e.g.,
McGlone, 2008; Zaslavsky, 1991), there has been relatively little inquiry into how
culturally-based mathematics curricula are designed to address multicultural education in
the context of teaching and learning mathematics (see Lipka, Sharp, N., Brenner, Yanez,
& Sharp, F., 2005). Unpacking how effective, culturally-based mathematics curricula
address multicultural education has the potential to inform teachers’ use of such
curricula, the development of culturally-based mathematics curricula, and to support
teachers in integrating multicultural education into their practice of teaching
mathematics, and potentially other subjects as well.
There are varying interpretations of what multicultural education means and how
it can be addressed in school mathematics curriculum materials (e.g., see Legaspi &
Rickard, 2005). One widely accepted definition of multicultural education is offered by
Gollnick and Chinn (1998):
Multicultural education is the educational strategy in which students’ cultural
backgrounds are used to develop effective classroom instruction and school
environments. It is designed to support and extend the concepts of culture,
differences, equality, and democracy in the formal school setting. (p. 3)
Within teaching and learning mathematics, the above understanding of what multicultural
education is includes culturally based mathematics, which refers to peoples’ experiences
that arise within particular cultures to address mathematical problems that occur in their
environments (McGlone, 2008). For example, learning about relationships between area
and perimeter of rectangles and circles by studying circular dwellings of people
throughout the world (e.g., teepees in North America, yurts in Asia), connects
mathematics and cultures by drawing on cultural knowledge and traditions to build
understanding of mathematical reasoning, concepts, and relationships (e.g., Zaslavsky,
1991). This example of multicultural education, using culturally-based mathematics, is
consistent with multiple goals of school mathematics reform, including equity and
teaching and learning powerful mathematics for all students (NCTM, 2000). Moreover,
culturally-based mathematics is generally more meaningful, both mathematically and in
terms of multicultural education, than typical, and often superficial, approaches
commonly found in school mathematics curricula – e.g., sprinkling diverse names into
traditional word problems in textbooks, using various national flags as examples of
geometric shapes, providing pictures of diverse people and places (Legaspi & Rickard,
2005). Culturally based mathematics, therefore, is an approach that connects teaching
and learning school mathematics with multicultural education to increase the
3. ANTHONY RICKARD
____________________________________________________________________________________3
accessibility, meaning, and application of mathematics for all students (McGlone, 2008;
Rickard & Lipka, 2007).
Culturally Based Mathematics Curricula
A common view of traditional or standards based K-12 mathematics curricula
(e.g., textbook series, commercially available supplementary materials and activities) is
that they are largely devoid of culture and reflect the abstract and decontextualized nature
of mathematics. However, critics argue that such curricula actually are culturally-based
and, in particular, reflect Western European culture and advantage students from that
culture over others (e.g., Malloy & Malloy, 1998). This perspective emphasizes the need
to draw on students’ backgrounds, knowledge, and communities (i.e., culture) to support
teaching and learning mathematics (Rickard & Lipka, 2007). Providing all students with
a variety of culturally-based experiences in mathematics arguably makes sense from the
perspective of the discipline of mathematics itself – i.e., as a human endeavor,
mathematics is the product of many individuals from many cultures, and this rich heritage
should be part of what students learn about mathematics (Lipka et al., 2005; Swetz, 1997;
Taylor, 1997).
Culturally based school mathematics curricula may take multiple forms (e.g.,
units, modules, lessons, activities), but typically share a common thread where
mathematics is learned, conducted, or explored in some explicit and culturally authentic
way or to understand a particular cultural activity. For example, as discussed earlier,
students may apply and develop their understanding of perimeter and area to understand
why many indigenous cultures build dwellings in a circular shape (e.g., Zaslavsky, 1991)
or students might construct a model of a Yup’ik smokehouse to learn about the
mathematics of prisms (e.g., Kagle, Barber, Lipka, Sharp, & Rickard, 2007). In both
cases, mathematics and culture are entwined to provide an engaging experience for all
students that address goals for reforming school mathematics (cf., Kagle et al., 2007;
NCTM, 2000; Zaslavsky, 1991). In arguing for cultural knowledge and culturally based
mathematics to be a part of the school mathematics curriculum, Malloy and Malloy
(1998) note that:
The curriculum that promotes all students participating in mathematics learning is
problem-based. The problems are real and can be solved using multiple
approaches and methodology. … Using the learning strengths of students’
cultures in our pedagogy and our curriculum, educators can serve all students. (p.
254)
Such culturally based mathematics curricula address the above issues; including
supporting broad reforms for school mathematics (see NCTM, 2000).
Math in a Cultural Context (MCC), a K-7 mathematics curriculum development
project, has produced a series of modules for teaching and learning culturally based and
standards based mathematics (Rickard & Lipka, 2007). Each module is based on one or
more authentic cultural or subsistence activities of the Yup’ik people of southwestern
4. NATIONAL FORUM OF MULTICULTURAL ISSUES JOURNAL
4____________________________________________________________________________________
Alaska, one of the major groups of the indigenous people of Alaska. MCC modules are
designed for teachers and students to explore and learn the mathematics that is embedded
in authentic cultural and subsistence activities, thereby connecting mathematics to Yup’ik
culture, developing and learning the mathematics in the cultural context, and then
connecting to traditional Western mathematics. In this way, Alaska Native students,
particularly Yup’ik students, have the opportunity to explore and learn mathematics on
their own cultural terms, rather than solely having to adopt the (western) culture of the
formal school setting. Consistent with research that has shown how students learn
mathematics more effectively when they can navigate mathematical terrain from the
more familiar ground of their own culture (e.g., Nasir, Hand, & Taylor, 2008); research
on the impact of MCC modules on students’ achievement has shown that all students, but
particularly Alaska Native students, benefit from MCC modules. These benefits include
outperforming peers who learn the same mathematics from traditional mathematics
curricula and narrowing the persistent mathematics achievement gap with Caucasian
students in urban Alaska (e.g., Lipka, Parker-Webster, & Yanez, 2005; Lipka & Rickard,
2007).
Building a Fish Rack
One of the modules in the MCC series is Building a Fish Rack: Investigations
into Proof, Properties, Perimeter, and Area (Adams & Lipka, 2003). After providing
background of the salmon fishery in the Bristol Bay region of southwestern Alaska,
students learn in the module about how traditional Yup’ik fish racks are constructed and
used to dry and prepare harvested salmon. In particular, fish racks have a rectangular
frame, and constructing a fish rack includes determining where the four posts that form
the “legs” need to be placed. Mathematically, this means placing the posts to make the
vertices of a rectangle. The figure below shows the top of a typical Yup’ik fish rack;
posts at the four corners are like the legs of a rectangular table (this type of fish rack is
typically 4-5 feet high) and salmon that is prepared and cut is draped over the “slats” to
dry:
Figure 1. Top view of a Yup’ik fish rack with a rectangular frame.
5. ANTHONY RICKARD
____________________________________________________________________________________5
Fish racks are generally made from wood, often obtained from nearby trees or recycled
from other projects. Larger posts are used for the legs/corners of the fish rack and
smaller poles (or branches) are used for the slats on which the salmon is draped. It is
important to note that in different regions of Alaska, fish racks are made in different
shapes and sizes, depending on local and cultural traditions, the material that is available,
and the quantity of salmon that is (or is expected to be) harvested (Adams & Lipka,
2003).
After they learn about the form and function of Yup’ik fish racks, the Building a
Fish Rack module engages students in several activities that provide an exploration of
how a fish rack is made. Students learn how Yup’ik elders traditionally make fish racks,
and then explore the mathematics embedded in the traditional construction process. For
example, to correctly position the posts for the frame of the fish rack, it must be verified
that the posts form the corners (vertices) of a rectangle; if the base of the fish rack is not
rectangular, it may fall over and ruin the drying salmon. Students learn how Yup’ik
elders determine the rectangular base by using ropes to measure diagonals, implicitly
using the property of rectangles that the diagonals must be congruent (see Adams &
Lipka, 2003). As the module progresses, students develop understanding of
mathematical proof and reasoning (e.g., if the diagonals of a quadrilateral are not
congruent, the shape cannot be a rectangle), as well as understanding about the
relationships between perimeter and area of rectangles, and how to measure the perimeter
and area of different shapes, including developing perimeter and area formulas for
common figures (e.g., rectangles, triangles, parallelograms, trapezoids, and circles). All
of the explorations are in the context of traditional Yup’ik culture and subsistence. For
example, students explore the mathematical conjecture, “The perimeters of different
rectangles are the same, so they will hold the same number of fish” (Adams & Lipka,
2003, p. 142). Mathematically, this conjecture is equivalent to asking that if the
perimeters of different rectangles are the same, must they have the same area. Students
explore this conjecture and determine that it is not true (e.g., a 1x6 and a 3x4 rectangle
each have the same perimeter of 14 units, but have different areas of 7 square units and
12 square units, respectively), and then determine which rectangle, for a fixed perimeter,
has the largest area (i.e., a square). These findings are then connected back to Yup’ik
culture by finding, for a fixed amount of construction material, what shape a rectangular
fish rack should be to hold the most fish (i.e., the fish rack should be made as close to the
shape of a square as possible). At the end of the Building a Fish Rack module, students
use toothpicks and gumdrops to make their own model fish rack and document their
mathematical reasoning (Adams & Lipka, 2003).
A Case Study of Building a Fish Rack:
Multicultural Education in School Mathematics
Sleeter (1997) argues that multicultural education and school mathematics overlap
and connect in many ways. In particular, she shows that four themes emerge from the
research literature that link multicultural education and school mathematics (Sleeter,
1997):
6. NATIONAL FORUM OF MULTICULTURAL ISSUES JOURNAL
6____________________________________________________________________________________
• Raising the mathematics achievement of girls and other student groups who
underachieve in mathematics;
• Improving access to mathematics for students who have historically not studied
mathematics at higher levels;
• Ethnomathematics, which urges teachers to employ culturally relevant pedagogy
to engage students in mathematics;
• Connecting mathematics to the real-life concerns of students and the issues that
impact them and their communities.
Analyzing the MCC Building a Fish Rack module through the lenses of these four themes
can provide insight into how an example of culturally based school mathematics curricula
may address multicultural education. Understanding how a culturally based mathematics
curriculum module addresses multicultural education can, in turn, provide deeper
understanding about the role such curricula may play in K-12 mathematics as vehicles for
reform (e.g., implementing the equity principle of the NCTM Standards) and how they
may help all students develop mathematical power (c.f., Legaspi & Rickard, 2005;
Malloy & Malloy, 1998; McGlone, 2008; NCTM, 2000; Sleeter, 1997; Zaslavsky, 1991).
Raising Mathematics Achievement
Multiple studies have shown that students, who learned mathematics with MCC
modules, including Building a Fish Rack, generally demonstrate higher mathematics
achievement than their peers who learn the same mathematics from other mathematics
curricula (Rickard & Lipka, 2007). For example, in a case study of how one sixth-grade
teacher taught Building a Fish Rack in her classroom, comparing the results of pretests
and posttests between the class and their peers in control classrooms (who learned the
same mathematics on perimeter and area from other curriculum texts and materials)
found that the Building a Fish Rack class (N=22) scored 42.91% on the pretest and
72.41% on the posttest, whereas the control students (N=47) scored 41.26% on the
pretest and 42.04% on the posttest (Rickard, 2005). The Building a Fish Rack class and
the control students were not only similar in their pretest scores, but were also
comparable in terms of diversity and other factors (see Rickard, 2005). As well as
quantitative measures, qualitative data collected in classrooms suggests that MCC
modules, including Building a Fish Rack, also help students develop skill in
communicating with mathematics and problem solving (Rickard, 2005; Lipka & Rickard,
2007). Moreover, while gains in academic achievement are generally similar for both
boys and girls, MCC modules generally promote strong gains in mathematics
achievement of Alaska Native students, narrowing the persistent mathematics
achievement gap between Alaska Native and non-Native students (Lipka et al., 2005).
7. ANTHONY RICKARD
____________________________________________________________________________________7
Access to High-Level Mathematics
As a standards based mathematics curriculum module, Building a Fish Rack
develops rich mathematics content (e.g., perimeter and area of two-dimensional shapes
and the relationships between these measures), as well as addressing process goals that
are central to mathematics reform (e.g. problem solving, reasoning and proof,
connections, communication, representation). For example, the NCTM representation
process standard (see NCTM, 2000) is addressed in Building a Fish Rack because
students, “…represent their solutions verbally, numerically, graphically, geometrically,
and symbolically” (Adams & Lipka, 2003, p. 3). The NCTM content standards of
measurement and geometry are the content standards most directly addressed by Building
a Fish Rack (c.f., Adams & Lipka, 2003; NCTM, 2000).
Another way of establishing that Building a Fish Rack provides students and
teachers with quality mathematics, and can prepare students for successful study of
mathematics at higher levels, is to compare the module to other standards based curricula
that addresses similar content and is known to be of high quality. One such example is
the unit Covering and Surrounding that is part of the Connected Mathematics Project
middle school mathematics curriculum (Lappan, Fey, Fitzgerald, Friel, & Phillips, 2002).
Like Building a Fish Rack, Covering and Surrounding is standards based, is intended for
sixth grade, centers on perimeter and area of two-dimensional figures (and the
relationship between these measures), and addresses all five of the NCTM process
standards (c.f., Adams & Lipka, 2003; Lappan et al., 2002; NCTM, 2000). Moreover, in
its 1999 review of all twelve nationally available middle school mathematics curricula,
the American Association for the Advancement of Science ranked the Connected
Mathematics Project the highest; also in 1999, the U.S. Department of Education
reviewed middle school curricula and the Connected Mathematics Project curriculum
was the only one ranked “exemplary” by the Department’s Mathematics and Science
Education Expert Panel (Conklin, Grant, Ludema, Rickard, & Rivette, 2006). Supporting
the claim that Building a Fish Rack is a standards based module that helps prepare
students for high-level mathematics is its close alignment with Covering and
Surrounding, as shown in the table below (Covering and Surrounding is comprised of
seven Investigations and a final unit project, Building a Fish Rack is comprised of 18
activities with the last activity being a final project for the module):
8. NATIONAL FORUM OF MULTICULTURAL ISSUES JOURNAL
8____________________________________________________________________________________
Covering and Surrounding
Investigations
Corresponding Activities from Building
a Fish Rack
1. Measuring Perimeter and Area 9. Perimeter and Shape
10. Exploring Perimeter of Rectangles
11. Measuring Area
2. Measuring Odd Shapes 9. Perimeter and Shape (e.g., finding the
perimeter of Seagull Island)
3. Constant Area, Changing Perimeter 15. Area Held Constant with Perimeter
Changing
4. Constant Perimeter, Changing Area 12. Investigating the Relationship of
Perimeter and Area of Rectangles
5. Measuring Parallelograms
6. Measuring Triangles
7. Going Around in Circles
13. Area of Different Shapes
14. Deriving Area Formulas
Project: Plan a Park (students create a
rectangular layout or “blueprint” of a park
with specific requirement, drawn to scale)
18. Project: Constructing a Fish Rack
(students make models of fish racks using
gumdrops and toothpicks)
Figure 2. Comparison of covering and surrounding and Building a Fish Rack.
As the above comparison shows, Building a Fish Rack addresses very similar
mathematics content included in Covering and Surrounding (c.f., Adams & Lipka, 2003;
Lappan et al., 2002). This analysis of the close content alignment between Building a
Fish Rack and Covering and Surrounding underscores that Building a Fish Rack is
standards based and can help prepare students for success with higher-level mathematics.
Ethnomathematics
Ethnomathematics derives from the study of the form that mathematical ideas
take in different sociocultural contexts. School mathematics is a very narrow
subset of the range of mathematical thinking in which people have engaged, and it
is usually limited further when it presents mathematics as a finished product to be
memorized rather than as a challenging terrain for thought. (Sleeter, 1997, pp.
683-684)
Building a Fish Rack addresses the ethnomathematics theme of multicultural
education in school mathematics by using the traditional approaches of Yup’ik elders for
constructing a fish rack as the central mathematical motivation of the module, and
building a model fish rack as the final unit project. Adams and Lipka (2003) summarize
how Building a Fish Rack incorporates Yup’ik culture and the knowledge of elders with
reform mathematics:
The hands-on activities related to building a fish rack for the harvest of salmon
form the basis upon which formal mathematics develops in this module. Students
9. ANTHONY RICKARD
____________________________________________________________________________________9
engage in activities that simulate the way Yup’ik elders might go about building a
fish rack for drying salmon. In the process, they consider a number of factors:
ease of access, durability, strength, and capacity to hold a large amount of fish.
For example, students in one activity learn to maximize the area of a rectangular
drying rack, given a fixed perimeter. This exercise applies directly to the real-life
situation in which materials such as wood are often limited, and Yup’ik fisherman
thus optimize the drying rack with the few resources they have. In many
exercises students increase their understanding of both Yup’ik culture and
Western mathematics by learning cultural constructs such as sufficient and
adequate instead of maximum and best. (p. 3, emphasis in original)
As shown above, Building a Fish Rack addresses ethnomathematics, providing students
with cultural approaches to connecting, engaging, and developing specific mathematical
ideas. Another example of ethnomathematics as a vehicle for learning formal
mathematics in Building a Fish Rack is Activity 5: Elder Demonstration. In this activity,
students learn how several Yup’ik elders employ traditional approaches, using ropes and
stakes, to mark out the foundation outline for a fish rack. One of the steps in the
technique is to refine the rectangular outline by using the ropes to measure and adjust the
diagonals of the rectangular outline until they are of equal length. Students use this
authentic component of how the elders make the fish rack to learn formal mathematical
concepts about rectangles and measurement, specifically that the diagonals of rectangles
are congruent and that if the diagonals of a quadrilateral are not congruent, than it cannot
be a rectangle; students actually do this in the module, typically using string and masking
tape to make the outline for the base of the fish rack on the classroom or gym floor (see
Adams & Lipka, 2003). More broadly, all students experiencing how mathematics is
used in authentic ways in a specific culture benefit from having their perspectives
widened about what mathematics is and how it is used (Masingila & King, 1997).
Connecting Mathematics to Real Life
Teaching and learning mathematics in ways that connect to students’ real-life
circumstances, concerns, or other issues that impact them and their communities, is
another theme for addressing multicultural education in school mathematics. For Alaska
Native students, particularly Yup’ik students in the rural Bristol Bay region of
southwestern Alaska, Building a Fish Rack and other MCC modules connect to their lives
because the modules were developed with extensive collaboration from the Yup’ik
community, particularly elders (see Rickard & Lipka, 2007). Real-life connections for
Alaska Native students are generally connections for non-Native students in Alaska as
well because of integrated communities, the entwined nature of many issues in both rural
and urban Alaska, and the fact that all residents of Alaska need to know about the
multifaceted and multiethnic composition of their very large state to be effective
Alaskans (e.g., see Goldsmith, Howe, & Leask, 2005). For example, many Alaska
Native students have been to fish camp and Building a Fish Rack directly connects to
traditional subsistence issues and supports their taking leadership roles in the classroom.
10. NATIONAL FORUM OF MULTICULTURAL ISSUES JOURNAL
10____________________________________________________________________________________
Moreover, Alaska Native and non-Native students who have not been to fish camp have
generally heard about it and may have friends or relatives who have shared stories and
their experiences. Finally, for students who live outside of Alaska, Building a Fish Rack
may present a rich opportunity to learn about the state, about Alaska’s first people and
their culture, and about how both Alaska and its residents may be connected to their own
lives (Rickard, 2005).
Conclusions and Discussion
Using the learning strengths of students’ cultures in our pedagogy and our
curriculum, educators can serve all students. School can provide an academic
environment that relies on students’ cultural backgrounds as the foundation for
teaching and learning and enlists the students to become responsible for their
mathematics learning. (Malloy & Malloy, 1998, pp. 254-255)
Analysis of Building a Fish Rack, through the lenses of four themes connecting
multicultural education and school mathematics, shows that the module addresses both
multicultural education and school mathematics reforms. For example, Building a Fish
Rack is a standards based module that addresses two of the NCTM content standards (i.e.,
measurement and geometry) and all of the NCTM process standards (c.f., Adams &
Lipka, 2003; NCTM, 2000). Moreover, the module incorporates the multicultural
education themes of increasing students’ mathematics achievement (especially Alaska
Native students), improving students’ access to mathematics, ethnomathematics, and
connecting mathematics to real-life issues for students. Murtadha-Watts (1997) argues
for the need to develop K-6 mathematics curriculum that is culturally rich and can
empower students, both as learners of mathematics and to help them make social
decisions. Building a Fish Rack is an example of such mathematics curricula, as it is
culturally based and helps students develop mathematical power. Building a Fish Rack
serves as an example of integrated standards based mathematics and multicultural
education, with strong results for students’ achievement.
While Building a Fish Rack combines standards based mathematics and
multicultural education, it is not part of a complete curriculum. The ten different
modules in the MCC series for grades K-7, including Building a Fish Rack, comprise a
supplementary curriculum which the authors believe is best used to augment a complete
standards based mathematics curriculum (Rickard & Lipka, 2007). Therefore, while
some researchers argue for the need for a complete mathematics curriculum where
mathematics and multicultural education converge and empower students with socially
transformative mathematics (e.g., Murtadha-Watts, 1997), Building a Fish Rack, and
MCC modules in aggregate, do not accomplish this. However, as an example of what
part of a complete curriculum that integrates mathematics and multicultural education
could look like, Building a Fish Rack may serve as a vehicle for moving towards
development of such a curriculum. Moreover, curricula like Building a Fish Rack may
also help teachers develop and refine the skills, knowledge, and dispositions to teach
culturally based mathematics and address multicultural education in the mathematics
11. ANTHONY RICKARD
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classroom. In particular, teaching Building a Fish Rack, or other MCC modules, may
provide teachers with deeper knowledge of mathematics and a broader understanding of
how to address multicultural education in their mathematics.
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