Title: Seeing the Quality of Mathematical Knowledge in Instruction
1 Seeing the Quality of Mathematical Knowledge in
Instruction
Learning Mathematics for Teaching
ProjectUniversity of Michigan
Deborah L. Ball, Hyman Bass, Merrie Blunk, Katie
Brach, Charalambos Charalambous, Carolyn Dean,
Seán Delaney, Imani Masters Goffney, Heather
Hill, Jennifer Lewis, Geoffrey Phelps, Laurie
Sleep, Mark H. Thames, and Deborah Zopf
- TNE Observation Protocol Meeting
- Academy for Educational Development
- University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee October
17-19, 2007
2Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching
- Essential for high-quality mathematics teaching
- Learned in a variety of settings school,
university, teaching - Includes common content knowledge
- Comprises other domains of mathematics content
particular to the work of teaching
3An example of MKT
- Common content knowledge
- Can you simplify these radicals?
- v48
- v63
- v99
- v150
- Mathematical knowledge for teaching
- Mr. Squire is designing a lesson on simplifying
radical expressions. He wants to pick one example
from the previous days homework problems to
review at the beginning of todays class. His
goal is to select a problem that will lead to a
good discussion about different solution
strategies for simplifying radicals. - Which of the following is best for setting up a
good discussion about strategies for simplifying
radical expressions? - v48 v63 v99 v150
4Why does MKT matter?
- MKT is associated with childrens achievement
therefore we want to know - What are the domains of MKT?
- How do teachers acquire MKT?
- What is the relationship between instructional
practices and MKT? - What professional development experiences
contribute to MKT?
5Measuring MKT
- Paper-and-pencil multiple-choice items
- Develops the construct of MKT
- Provides data about professional development
6Validating MKT measures
- Does achievement on paper-and-pencil measures
matter in instruction? We videotaped lessons of a
subset of teachers to validate. - 10 teachers
- 9 videotaped lessons each, over one year
- Interviews
- If the MKT measures are valid, then teachers
performance in practice would correspond to their
achievement on the paper-and-pencil test.
7Coding Videotapes of Mathematics Teaching
- Videocodes cover these domains
- Mathematical content and instructional format
- Teachers use of mathematical language,
representations, explanations - Teachers mathematical interaction with student
productions - Teachers use of mathematics to teach equitably
- Videocodes are neutral regarding teaching style
(reform-oriented, didactic, etc.)
8Sample Representations
9An excerpt of code
10(No Transcript)
11 A teacher models
- Red pies represent negative numbers
- Green pies represent positive numbers
12Coding Glossary
- To code, first decide whether the mathematical
element is present (P) or not present (NP). If
present, then - Mark appropriate (A) if the teachers use of the
element was, for the most part, mathematically
accurate and appropriateit did not distort the
mathematics. - Mark inappropriate (I) if the teachers use of
the element distorted the mathematics or was
inappropriate for the grade level. - If not present, then
- Mark appropriate (A) if absence of the element
seems appropriate. - Mark inappropriate (I) if absence of the element
seems problematici.e., the element should have
happened.
13Use of videocodes
- Our findings
- inter-rater reliability of .7 to .85
- teachers clinical practice scores and test
scores correlation of .75 or higher - Others potential use of codes would require
- Shared understandings of the codes
- Users with MKT
-
14Continuing challenges
- How do we appraise teaching for equity?
- Some essential qualities difficult to nail down
(e.g., scaffolding) - High qualifications for coders
- Gap between quality teaching as envisioned by the
field and quality teaching that produces results
in schools