Title: Advanced Mathematical Decision Making
1Advanced Mathematical Decision Making
An initiative of the Charles A. Dana Center and
the Texas Association of Supervisors of
Mathematics
Transition Mathematics Project Webinar March 23,
2009 Susan H. Hull, Cathy Seeley Charles A. Dana
Center The University of Texas at Austin
2Todays World
- Shrinking, connecting, flattening
- Panic/Participation
- People need strong education, more math and
science - Critical thinking/reasoning/problem solving
skills transferable skills for versatilizing
3Profile of Successful Workers
- Top academic performance
- Creative and innovative
- Able to learn very quickly
Tough Choices or Tough Times,National Center on
Education and the Economy, 2007
4Where are we going?
Bill Gates Do we know where we're going? Are we
clear about our destination ensuring that every
student graduates from high school ready to
succeed in college, career, and life?
5What do all students need?
- Economic security
- More math and science than we thought--within a
well-balanced curriculum - Options for future choices and redirections
- Appreciating the need for life-long learning
- Thinking, reasoning, communication and problem
solving skills for versatilizing - The opportunity to develop their potential--
their right as citizens and human beings our
responsibility as educators
6Two goals
- More workers in math- and science-based fields
(STEM) - Every student quantitatively and scientifically
literate to much more sophisticated levels than
in the past, regardless of their field of interest
7Ready for College and Ready for Work Same or
Different?
ACT, May 2006
8Whether planning to enter college or workforce
training programs, students need to be educated
to a comparable level of readiness in reading
and mathematicsif they are to succeed in
college-level courses without remediation and
to enter workforce training programs ready to
learn job-specific skills.
ACT, 2006
9So how much math do students need for success in
college, work, and citizenship, and what math is
it?
10Recent Secondary Recommendations
- Achieve New definition of high school math
(more statistics, flexible organization) - College Board Standards for College Success
(more statistics, flexible organization) - American Statistical AssociationGAISE
Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in
Statistics Education (more statistics, flexible
organization) - NCTM
- States Washington!
11Emerging themes
- Algebra II is the new Algebra I
- But not your Grandpas Algebra II
- Statistics is (arguably) one of the most useful
mathematical sciences - Financial literacy is critical and lacking
- Changing world, changing student needs may call
for changing our view of math PK-16
12Where do they get what they need?
- High school 4 x 4
- Two-year colleges
- Four-year institutions
- Workforce training programs
13Achieves Advocacy for Rigorous Math for All
Students
- Taking rigorous math through Algebra II
- Reduces remediation in college
- Reduces gaps (by ½) in college completion rates
between White students and African-American and
Latino students - Students better prepared for college careers
- 12th grade math the biggest predictor of college
success
14The intensity and quality of ones secondary
school curriculum was the strongest influence not
merely on college entrance, but more importantly,
on bachelors degree completion for students who
attended a four-year college at any time. What
you study, how much of it, how deeply, and how
intensely has a great deal to do with degree
completion. Adelman, Toolbox
Revisited, 2005
15The impact of a high quality, rigorous, high
school curriculum on degree completion is more
pronounced, positively, for African American and
Latino students than any other pre-college
academic resources indicator.
Venezia, Betraying the College Dream, 2003
16(No Transcript)
17Criteria for High-Quality Capstone Courses
- Students should solidify and increase
mathematical knowledge and skills at and above
the level of Algebra II or its equivalent. - Arithmetic and algebraic processes
- Continued experience with functions
- Topics from non-traditional areas
18Criteria for High-Quality Capstone Courses
- Students need to go beyond rote memorization to
analysis and interpretation - Conceptual thinking
- Justification and reasoning, in context
- Experimental thinking and inquisitiveness
- Abstraction and generalization
- Connections
- Technology applications
19Criteria for High-Quality Capstone Courses
- Students need a variety of applications of math
across disciplines and in practical situations - Focus on non-routine, interesting problems
- Emphasis on modeling and problem solving
- Problems with multiple solution pathways
- Encouragement and nurturing of persistence
20Rubric and Rating System
- System for evaluating and comparing 4th year
capstone courses - 15 Criteria for High-Quality Capstone Courses
- Rating scale 0 to 3
- Rubric posted at Achieve/Dana Center website
http//www.utdanacenter.org/k12mathbenchmarks
214 years of math for all in the U.S. Whats
happening now?
- Districts creating 4th-year courses, depending on
teacher interest / capacity - No common standards no consistency across
districts. - Higher ed often is not involved in developing
courses (not true in WA). - Few resources little professional development.
22 Advanced Mathematical Decision-Making
An alternative for post-Algebra II
23More than content
- MATHEMATICAL PROCESSES
- Problem solving
- Reasoning
- Connections
- Communication
- Representation
Principles and Standards for School Mathematics,
NCTM, 2000
24Philosophy/Approach
- Modeling, reasoning, decision-making throughout
- Range of contexts
- Strong financial strand
- Students communicating and presenting
- Projects, extended problems can be strong element
- Appropriate technology to extend mathematical
understanding and allow complex problem solving
25Resources to download
- Websites
- Achieve/Dana site utdanacenter.org/k12mathbenchma
rks/resources - AMDM utdanacenter.org/amdm
- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs), including list
of course topics - AMDM Student Information Sheet
- AMDM Student Expectations
- Overview of Instructional Units
26Considerations
- Must be a coherent part of districts and states
PK-12 program - High-quality, comprehensive, coherent
instructional materials available free for
download (after the pilot year) - Need long-term, high-quality professional
development and training - Working for Texas State Board approval of AMDM as
a state-adopted course
27Professional Development
- Current planning
- 3 days in summer (focus on first semester content
and AMDM course as a whole) - 2 days during the fall (focus on 2nd semester
content) - 3 follow-up days during the year (half-day or
full day, electronic/online or face-to-face) - Community of AMDM educators
- Follow-up summer conference (by-demand
speakers/topics, sharing sessions)
28Summer 2009 (pilots)
- Professional development for pilot sites
- June 16-18 Dallas area (Plano ISD)
- July 27-29 Houston area (Clear Creek ISD)
- July 29-31 San Antonio area (Northside ISD)
- August 5-7 Austin area (Austin ISD)
- Possibility of out-of-state sessions by contract
29Piloting AMDM 2009-2010
- Between 25 100 teachers in 20 70 schools
- A few out of state sites
- Materials available only to pilot sites 2009-2010
- Cost Travel and release time for teachers to
participate in professional development - Cost Duplication of student materials
- Out of state participation in TX professional
development as space allows (IL, IN, MA, WA?)
30Pilot Sites
- Flexible teachers with strong math knowledge
- Commitment to participate in professional
learning experiences - Willingness to deal with a bit of ambiguity
- Commitment to provide feedback on materials and
professional development
31Next steps
- Pilot with materials 2009-2010
- Implementation with materials 2010-2011(professi
onal development summer 2010) - Shift to self-sustaining, ongoing professional
development 2011 or 2012(Support from
Universities? Others?) - Continue policy work
32Questions/Discussion
33Contact us
- Cathy Seeley
- cseeley_at_mail.utexas.edu
- Susan H. Hull
- shhull_at_mail.utexas.edu
- Molly Ewing
- amdm_at_austin.utexas.edu
- Charles A. Dana Center, University of Texas at
Austin - utdanacenter.org
- Advanced Mathematical Decision Making web site
- utdanacenter.org/amdm