Title: Russell Gersten
1Needed Future Research on Instructional Practice
in Mathematics
- Russell Gersten
- Professor Emeritus, University of Oregon
- Director, Instructional Research Group
2What does not change isthe will to change
- Charles Olson, The Kingfishers, 1949
3There Have Been Changes in Math Instruction
Knowledge Base
- Small but growing body of empirical research
- Active sustained engagement by research
mathematicians in the process - Insights gained from international comparisons
.. Though correlational findings hard to
interpret accurately - Scores on NAEP grade 4 rising
4Response to Intervention (RtI) Increased Interest
in Interventionsfor Struggling Students
- However, problems include
- Lack of valid screening and progress monitoring
measures - Lack of reliable and valid formative assessment
measures - Need for Interventions at the Secondary Level
- Limited connections/misunderstandings between
mathematics education and special education
communities
5(No Transcript)
6Objectives for the Session
- Suggest needed future directions for
instructional research in mathematics -
- Describe troubling conceptual issues that require
advances, if not resolution - Modus Operandi Build from pockets of strength in
the research base.
7Sources of Inspiration
- National Mathematics Advisory Panel Report
- Assisting Students Struggling with Mathematics
Response to Intervention (RtI) for Elementary and
Middle Schools - http//www.centeroninstruction.org/
8Sources of Inspiration
- NCTM Curriculum Focal Points
- Meta-analysis of research on teaching students
with LD (Gersten, Chard, Jayanthi, Baker, Morphy
Flojo, in press Review of Educational
Research).
9Sources of Inspiration
- Research Mathematicians H. S. Wu, Sybilla
Beckman, Jim Lewis, Dick Askey, Jim Milgram, Hy
Bass - Mathematics education Deborah Ball, Heather
Hill, Skip Fennell, Jon Star, Joan Ferrini-Mundy,
Jeremy Kilpatrick, Karen Fuson, Bill Schmidt - Special education/ At risk learners Anne Foegen,
Lynn Fuchs, Brad Witzel, Diane Bryant, Ben
Clarke, Asha Jitendra - Psychology Dave Geary, Bob Siegler, Bethany
Rittle-Johnson
10Heavy Lifting Major Issues to Broach in Future
Research
- Instruction
- Teaching fractions and proportions (operations,
concepts, word problems, linkage of number
concepts to geometry concepts) so that students
understand the mathematics - Whole numbers algorithms and their link to
number properties, number lines and number paths,
number sense - Effective instructional sequences that
simultaneously build proficiency in multi-digit
multiplication and distributive property of
numbers - Sequences that integrate word problems with work
on procedural fluency
11Heavy Lifting
- Teacher Knowledge
- Content knowledge necessary to teach grades 3-5,
6, - Measures
- Valid screening measures and assessments for
grades 4-8 - Predictors of success in algebra
- Evidence that facility with fractions really does
predict success in algebra
12Other Interesting Areas
- Role of effort vs. talent in learning mathematics
- Use of this knowledge in interventions for
struggling students - Making middle school interventions come alive for
students - What should content be? Integrate with core grade
level instruction - Engagement (Bottge, Woodward, National Research
Council) - Ultimate goal of middle school double dose
intervention
13Other Interesting Areas
- Professional development that really makes a
difference - Exploration of extant data bases (NAEP, state
data bases) - Is mastery of fractions the key?
14Where to Start?
- Findings with some empirical evidence that can
serve as a basis for future research - Clear areas of need that should serve as a focus
for intervention research - Areas of fairly broad consensus that require
empirical validation or further study
15Starting Point For At-risk Learners/Intervention
Methods
- Explicit instruction (teachers model easy and
hard problems, and think aloud steps in how to
solve) - Systematic instruction
- Students justify decisions they make
- Judicious use of concrete representations and
consistent use of visual representations - (Source Gersten, Chard, Jayanthi et al., in
press)
16 A Few Starting Points From Experimental
Research
- Use of contrasting examples (Star)
- Focus on fluency with combinations/facts
(critical for understanding mathematics) - a mix of practice and work with number families
- estimation is more potent
- work on fact retrieval is critical
17Starting Point Word Problems
- Use of common underlying structures to help
students figure out how to solve word problems
e.g., change problems (for time), compare
problems (for quantity). (Cognitively guided
instruction, Jitendra et al, Fuchs et al). - Design curricular sequences so that students
consistently focus on underlying structure and
learn to ignore irrelevant information and
translate information from different formats
(pictorial, graphs, currency etc.) (Fuchs et al.) - Link word problems with procedural examples
(Singapore)
18A Stab at Putting our Needs and Starting Points
Together
- Longitudinal research Is proficiency with
fractions and proportions the key to future
success in algebra? (extant data bases, new
longitudinal research) - Word problems and visual representations
extensive use of underlying structure approach
and study of comparative impacts of various
visual representations? - Embedded in existing curricula? Asian curricula?
- Clarity as to measures of precisely what is
taught versus broader measures of problem solving
19A Stab at Putting our Needs and Starting Points
Together
- Valid screening measures for grades 3-8 for RtI
- Are state assessments valid for this purpose?
- What is the validity of commonly used benchmark
tests? Reliability? - Effective interventions for middle school
- Build on what is available and what is known
- Continue to use quasi-experiments and descriptive
research to understand impacts of double dose
interventions - Should second mathematics class be integrated
with the core class? If so,how?
20 Professional Development, Teaching and Policy
- Teaching content knowledge, especially to
teachers in grades 3-8 - Evaluate use of departmentalized mathematics
teachers in upper elementary schools - Evaluate impact of standards that are challenging
but focused and precise. (e.g. Massachusetts,
Minnesota, California)
21Areas of emerging consensus(National Mathematics
Panel)
- Reciprocal relationship between proficiency with
procedures and understanding of mathematical
ideas - Neither teacher directed nor student-centered
learning should be sole instructional means of
teaching - Topics need much more in depth coverage.
- At risk learners need some explicit instruction
22 But We Lack Precision
- What do these terms really mean?
- Conceptual understanding of distributive
property a (bc) ab ac - Explicit instruction
- Systematic instruction
- Guided inquiry
- Use of multiple representations
- Rich, deep mathematical problems
23And
- Precision is at the heart of mathematics
- (Wu, Milgram, and others)
-
24Final Thoughts
- Remember the importance of precise definitions
- Remember that there are serious mathematics ideas
that need to be highlighted in texts, state
standards, intervention programs - Equivalence, number line, number properties,
linear functions - Use more operational language to increase
precision of our research and our students
understanding of mathematics - e.g., minimal use of buzzwords such as
conceptual knowledge, real world problems, rich
mathematical problems
25Final Thought
- We can be precise
- Charles Olson, The Kingfishers, 1949