Title: The Current State of Mathematics in Our Nations Schools
1The Current State of Mathematics in Our Nations
Schools
- New York City Math Supervisors and Coaches
- May 26, 2009
- Zalman Usiskin
- The University of Chicagoz-usiskin_at_uchicago.edu
2The positive
3The positive
- Students are taking significantly more
mathematics than ever before.
4Percents of 8th graders studying various levels
of mathematics curricula
- Alg Enr. Typ Rem.
- SIMS 13 11 66 10
- Alg PreA Reg Other
- NAEP 16 19 61 5
- NAEP 20 36 39 5
- G/AA Alg PreA Reg Other
- NAEP 3 25 31 37 5
- 2003 NAEP 5 28 29 33 5
- 2007 NAEP 7 34 30 25 4
- SIMS Second International Mathematics Study
- NAEP National Assessment of Educational
Progress - Alg Algebra Enr Enriched Typ Typical Rem
Remedial - PreA Pre-algebra Reg Regular G/AA
Geometry or Advanced Algebra.
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7NMAP (2008) statement
- All school districts should ensure that all
prepared students have access to an authentic
algebra course - and should prepare more students
than at present to enroll in such a course by
Grade 8. (p. 23)
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9End w/ A or G
AA
FST
PDM
C
PDM
C
A or G
AA
FST
10End w/ A or G
AA
FST
PDM
C
PDM
C
A or G
AA
FST
11Percent of high school graduates with highest
level of mathematics
Source 2005 NAEP H.S. Transcript Study (Feb
2007)
12The positive
- Students are taking significantly more
mathematics than ever before. - Scores of students on national tests have been
increasing for some time.
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148th grade NAEP scores 1990-2007
4th grade NAEP scores 1990-2007
15New York - Grade 4 (public) NAEP average scores
16New York - Grade 8 (public) NAEP average scores
17Mean SAT-I Math and ACT-Math scores
- Year SAT ACT
- 1990 501 19.9
- 1991 500 20.0
- 1992 501 20.0
- 1993 503 20.1
- 1994 504 20.2
- 1995 506 20.2
- 1996 508 20.2
- 1997 511 20.6
- 1998 512 20.8
- 1999 511 20.7
- 2000 514 20.7
- 2001 514 20.7
- 2002 516 20.6
- 2003 519 20.6
- 2004 518 20.7
- 2005 520 20.7
- 2006 518 20.8
- 2007 515 21.0
181960
1980
2000
1990
1970
new math
back-to-basics
problem-solving
standards
NCLB
SAT-M
SAT-V
19NMAP statement (2008)
- During most of the 20th century, the United
States possessed peerless mathematical prowess -
not just as measured by the depth and number of
the mathematical specialists who practiced here
but also by the scale and quality of its
engineering, science, and financial leadership,
and even by the extent of mathematical education
in its broad population . (Executive Summary, p.
xi)
20Number of AP Calculus Exams 2000-2008
- Year AB BC
- 2000 137,276 34,142
- 2001 146,771 38,134
- 2002 157,524 41,785
- 2003 166,821 45,973
- 2004 175,094 50,134
- 2005 185,992 54,415
- 2006 197,181 58,603
- 2007 211,693 64,311
- 2008 222,835 69,103
- Source The College Board, AP Report to the
Nation 2005-06-07-08
21Source David Bressoud www.macalester.edu/bress
oud/talks/CBMS.pdf
22Percents of students with each score on AP
Calculus Exams
- AB BC
- Year 2004 2005 2006 2007 2004 2005 2006 2007
- Score
- 5 20.4 20.9 22.3 21.0 39.8 43.8 41.9 43.5
- 4 19.9 19.5 20.5 18.7 18.8 17.0 19.7 17.9
- 3 19.0 17.7 18.6 19.1 20.9 20.1 19.7 18.8
- 2 17.6 16.7 15.5 15.4 7.7 6.8 6.4 6.4
- 1 23.0 25.2 23.2 25.7 12.8 12.3 12.3 13.5
- 3 59.3 58.1 61.3 58.8 79.6 80.9 81.3 80.2
- mean 2.97 2.94 3.03 2.94 3.65 3.73 3.72 3.71
-
- Source The College Board, AP Reports to the
Nation 2005-06-07-08
23The negative
24The negative
- The gap between the mathematics performance of
various groups is enormous and declining very
little if at all.
25American Math Achievement
26Average NAEP scores by race/ethnicity, 1990-2005,
grade 4
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30Average NAEP scores by race/ethnicity,
1990-2005, grade 8
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33New York - Grade 4 (public) NAEP 2007 average
scores
34New York - Grade 8 (public)NAEP 2007 average
scores
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36NMAP statement
- The use of real-world contexts to introduce
mathematical ideas has been advocated A
synthesis of findings from a small number of
high-quality studies indicates that if
mathematical ideas are taught using real-world
contexts, then students performance on
assessments involving similar real-world
problems is improved. However, performance on
assessments more focused on other aspects of
mathematics learning, such as computation, simple
word problems, and equation solving, is not
improved . (p. xxiii and p. 49)
37Strong Standard Understand how real and complex
numbers are related, including plotting complex
numbers as points on a plane. Example Plot the
points corresponding to 3 2i and 1 4i. Add
these complex numbers and plot the result. How
is this point related to the other two? Weak
Standard Model and analyze real-world situations
by using patterns and functions. Source AFT,
Sizing Up State Standards, 2008
Time, Apr 27, 2009
38The negative
- The gap between the mathematics performance of
various groups is enormous and declining very
little if at all. - The gap between what is offered in some schools
and what is offered in others is enormous.
39Percent of high school graduates completing that
level of mathematics
Source 2005 NAEP H.S. Transcript Study (2007)
40The negative
- The gap between the mathematics performance of
various groups is enormous and declining very
little if at all. - The gap between what is offered in some schools
and what is offered in others is enormous. - The mathematics teacher is beleaguered by
conflicting expectations coming from all
directions.
41Conflicting expectations
- the course syllabus
- the textbook
- college entrance tests (SATs, ACTs)
- state tests
- college placement tests
- parental expectations
- local customs
- a teachers own views and expectations
42The rational
43The rational
- NCLB - no public non-charter school given a free
pass
44The rational
- NCLB - no public non-charter school given a free
pass - Move towards consistent standards
45The move towards national standards
- NCTM Standards (1989, 2000)
- No Child Left Behind legislation (2002)
- ASA K-12 Standards (2005)
- College Board standards for college success
(Springboard et al.) (2006) - American Diploma Project standards (Achieve)
(2006) - NCTM K-8 Focal Points (2006)
- NCTM focus on h.s. mathematics (2009, to appear)
46The rational
- NCLB - no (public, not charter) school given a
free pass - Move towards consistent standards
- Test as many students as possible to determine
how we are doing
47The irrational
48The irrational
- NCLB- and state-mandated testing will improve
scores overall.
49States currently testing in grades 3-8 Reading
and Math
Alaska
Washington
Maine
North Dakota
Minnesota
Montana
Vermont
New Hampshire
Oregon
Massachusetts
Wisconsin
South Dakota
New York
Rhode Island
Michigan
Idaho
Connecticut
Wyoming
New Jersey
Pennsylvania
Iowa
Nebraska
Ohio
Delaware
Indiana
West Virginia
Nevada
Illinois
Maryland
Utah
Colorado
District of Columbia (not pictured)
Virginia
Kansas
Missouri
California
Kentucky
North Carolina
Tennessee
South Carolina
Oklahoma
Arizona
New Mexico
Arkansas
Alabama
Georgia
Mississippi
Hawaii
Texas
Louisiana
Florida
Puerto Rico (not pictured)
50California and Illinois - Grade 4 (public)NAEP
average scores 1992-2007
51California and Illinois - Grade 8 (public)NAEP
average scores 1992-2007
52The irrational
- NCLB-mandated testing will improve scores
overall. - NCLB-mandated testing will reduce performance
differences between high- and low-performing
groups (the achievement gap).
53The irrational
- NCLB-mandated testing will improve scores
overall. - NCLB-mandated testing will reduce performance
differences between high- and low-performing
groups (the achievement gap). - One size fits all.
54The many kinds of students
- the selective school college-bound
- the non-selective school college bound who will
get a bachelors degree - the college bound who will not finish college
- the work-force/technical school bound
- the dropout who gets a GED
- the student who will never attain high-school
equivalency
55The irrational
- NCLB-mandated testing will improve scores
overall. - NCLB-mandated testing will reduce performance
differences between high- and low-performing
groups (the achievement gap). - One size fits all.
- Some NCLB provisions are mathematically
impossible to attain.
56 Some Impossible NCLB provisions
- The Lake Wobegon Effect that all students can
be brought up to grade level
57- "Isn't the purpose of public education to make
sure every child reads at grade level? Right
now, we're only seeing rates at 30 or 40
percent...These gaps mean children aren't
achieving and we have to target that. - - Ron Tomalis, acting asst. secy, DOE, 2003
58- A Key Policy letter
- September 5, 2006
- Dear Chief State School Officers
- To meet the goal that all students will be on
grade level in reading and mathematics by 2014,
we need to pick up the pace in our efforts to
ensure that all core academic subjects are taught
by highly qualified and effective teachers.
(long letter) - Sincerely,
- Margaret Spellings
- Source NCLB website.
59 Impossible NCLB provisions
- The Lake Wobegon Effect that all students can
be brought up to grade level - The Movement Paradox that moving students
from a poor-performing school to a
better-performing school will improve school
performance
60 Impossible NCLB provisions
- The Lake Wobegon Effect bringing all students
up to grade level - The Movement Paradox moving scores from one
group to another does not necessarily lower the
mean in one and raise the mean in the other - The Upper Bound Effect that school mean
scores can increase indefinitely
61The irrational
- NCLB-mandated testing will improve scores
overall. - NCLB-mandated testing will reduce performance
differences between high- and low-performing
groups (the achievement gap). - One size fits all.
- Some NCLB provisions are mathematically
impossible to attain. - We have based virtually all of our K-12 policy
decisions on curriculum on the assumption that
the sole reason for teaching mathematics is for
success in college mathematics classrooms.
62The imaginary
63The imaginary
- The U.S. mathematics curriculum is a mile
wide and an inch deep. - Schmidt
64NMAP statement
- A focused, coherent progression of mathematics
learning, with an emphasis on proficiency with
key topics, should become the norm in elementary
and middle school mathematics curricula. Any
approach that continually revisits topics year
after year without closure is to be avoided. (p.
xvii and p. 22)
65Average Years of Coverage and Emphasis of Certain
Topics in the Mathematics Curriculum of Several
Countries
- Country Coverage Emphasis
- France 7 1
- Japan 5.5 4.5
- Norway 8 0.5
- Spain 5 1
- Switzerland 7 3
- United States 7.5 3.75
-
- average of years devoted to the following
topics - whole number, fractions/decimals,
exponents/roots, and equations/formulas - From Characterizing Pedagogical Flow, p. 52
66The imaginary
- The U.S. mathematics curriculum is a mile wide
and an inch deep. - Schmidt - Our standing on international tests has serious
implications for our economy.
67Our students are falling behind their
counterparts in the rest of the world,
threatening the U.S.s economic future. - Walter
Isaacson, CEO, Aspen Institute
Time, Apr 27, 2009
681963-64
691963-64
701980-81
711980-81
72TIMSS 1994-95 8th grade means
- Statistically equal to U.S.
- New Zealand 508
- Norway 503
- United States 500
- Spain 487
- Iceland 487
- Statistically below U.S.
- Cyprus 474
- Portugal 454
- Iran 428
- Significantly higher than U.S.
- Singapore 643
- Korea 607
- Japan 605
- Hong Kong 588
- Belgium-Flemish 565
- Czech Republic 564
- Slovak Republic 547
- Switzerland 545
- France 538
- Hungary 537
- Russian Federation 535
- Ireland 527
- Canada 527
- Sweden 519
Mean score of countries meeting sampling
specifications 527
73TIMSS 1994-95 8th grade means
- Statistically equal to U.S.
- New Zealand 508
- Norway 503
- United States 500
- Spain 487
- Iceland 487
- Statistically below U.S.
- Cyprus 474
- Portugal 454
- Iran 428
- Significantly higher than U.S.
- Singapore 643
- Korea 607
- Japan 605
- Hong Kong 588
- Consortium 587
- Belgium-Flemish 565
- Czech Republic 564
- Slovak Republic 547
- Switzerland 545
- France 538
- Hungary 537
- Russian Federation 535
- Ireland 527
- Canada 527
- Sweden 519
Mean score of countries meeting sampling
specifications 527
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752003
76of top 27 countries at each grade level
2007
77The imaginary
- The U.S. mathematics curriculum is a mile wide
and an inch deep. - Schmidt - Our standing on international tests has serious
implications for our economy. - Singapore (or Japan or Korea) is a good model
to emulate.
78Rating of the current state of mathematics
education in the U.S., on a scale from 0 to 10
79The current state of mathematics education in the
U.S. is complex, better than it was, not as good
as we want, not as bad as critics charge, and
being dragged down by irrational goals and
actions fueled by imaginary views.
80Thank you!
z-usiskin_at_uchicago.edu