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MSP

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Title: MSP Author: James E. Hamos Last modified by: RhodesH Created Date: 11/3/1998 2:14:47 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show Company – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MSP


1
Optimism and Opportunities
Math and Science Partnership A Research and
Development Effort
James Hamos Division of Undergraduate
Education Directorate for Education and Human
Resources
2
Todays Conversation
  • A Quick Glance at the NSF-MSP Portfolio
  • What are we learning?
  • Funding Opportunities
  • Persisting Challenges

3
Disclaimer
  • The instructional practices and assessments
    discussed or shown in these presentations are not
    intended as an endorsement by the U.S. Department
    of Education.

4
Persisting Challenges?
  • Jot down three challenges you see that persist in
    this important work of improving STEM education
    through partnership between Post-secondary
    education and K-12 education

5
NSFs Math and Science Partnership
  • A research development effort at NSF for
    building capacity and integrating the work of
    higher education with that of K-12 to strengthen
    and reform mathematics and science education
  • Launched in FY 2002 as a result of legislative
    interest and was also a key facet of the NCLB
    vision for K-12 education
  • Strongly reauthorized as part of the America
    COMPETES Act of 2007 and provided with additional
    appropriation in the American Recovery and
    Reinvestment Act of 2009 and the FY 2009 federal
    budget

6
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7
  • What distinguishes NSFs MSP Program?
  • Substantial intellectual engagement of
    mathematicians, scientists and engineers from
    higher education in improving K-12 student
    outcomes in mathematics and the sciences
  • Depth and quality of creative, strategic actions
    that extend beyond commonplace approaches

8
  • What distinguishes NSFs MSP Program?
  • Breadth and depth of Partnerships Partnerships
    between organizations, rather than among
    individuals only
  • Organizational/institutional change driven by
    Partnerships
  • Degree to which MSP work is integrated with
    evidence degree to which the work of the
    Partnerships is itself the work of scholars who
    seek evidence for what they do

9
145 Funded MSP Projects
12 Comprehensive Partnerships (FY 2002, FY
2003) 36 Targeted Partnerships (FY 2002, FY
2003, FY 2004, FY 2008) 23 Institute
Partnerships (Prototype Award in FY 2003, FY
2004, FY 2006, FY 2008, FY 2009) 19 MSP-Start
Partnerships (FY 2008, FY2009) 6 Phase II
Partnerships (FY 2008, FY 2009) 49 RETA
projects (Design Awards in FY 2002, FY 2003, FY
2004, FY 2006, FY 2008, FY 2009)
10
Math and Science Partnership (MSP)
Program National Distribution of Partnership
Activity
11
Scope of Partnership Projects
  • Over 900 K-12 school districts
  • 5 million students
  • 147,000 teachers of K-12 math and science
  • Over 200 institutions of higher education
  • Over 2600 faculty, administrators, graduate and
    undergraduate students 

12
Key Features
  • Partnership-driven, with significant engagement
    of faculty in mathematics, the sciences, and
    engineering
  • Teacher quality, quantity, and diversity
  • Challenging courses and curricula
  • Evidence-based design and outcomes
  • Institutional change and sustainability

13
Impacts on Students
  • Overall increase in math proficiency in MSP
    schools from the first year 2003-04 (672 schools
    in the sample) to the 2006-07 (1666 schools in
    sample) at all levels (analysis years to date
    future reports will document later trends)
  • Sustained (1st year to end year) increase in math
    proficiency is statistically significant at all
    three levels

14
Impacts on Students
Increased proficiency of students across the MSP
portfolio on state mathematics assessments
15
Impacts continued
  • Schools that focused specifically with math
    interventions had a particularly powerful and
    sustained impact on student achievement in math
    as compared to schools in other projects that did
    not have this focus
  • Similar trends in improved student achievement in
    science also were found, particularly in schools
    that focused on science interventions

16
Impacts continued
  • A closing of the achievement gaps in MSP schools
  • between both African American and Hispanic
    students and white student in elementary school
    math, middle school science and high school
    science
  • between African American and white students in
    elementary school science
  • between Hispanic and with students in high
    school mathematics

17
Examining Student Achievement
  • Year-by-Year Trend Analysis
  • Matched comparisons
  • Meta-analysis pre/post assessments

Closing the Achievement Gap
18
  • What Are We Learning?

19
What are we learning? A few reminders from past
presentations
  • Through new long-term and coherent courses and
    programs, the involvement of STEM faculty and
    their departments in pre- and in-service
    education enhances content knowledge of teachers
  • STEM Professional Learning Communities are new
    exemplars in professional development
  • MSP projects are making new contributions to the
    STEM education literature related to teacher
    content knowledge and teacher leadershipKnowledge
    Management and Disseminationwww.mspkmd.net
  • Research methods in ethnography and social
    network analysis help document change in
    institutions and partnerships
  • New centers and institutes devoted to K-16 math
    and science education facilitate interactions
    between higher education and K-12, offer
    professional development for STEM faculty, and
    advance the scholarship of teaching and learning

20
What are we learning? A few reminders from past
presentations
  • Post-secondary STEM faculty, often with aid of
    teachers-in-residence on college campuses, are
    broadening their discussions of teaching and
    learning and supporting new efforts in teacher
    preparation
  • Revised tenure promotion policies recognize
    faculty for scholarly contribution to the
    advancement of math and science education
  • STEM faculty engagement with K-12 is resulting
    in
  • Increased sophistication in pedagogy and praxis
    of STEM faculty
  • An awareness of the importance of the STEM
    faculty role in pre-service preparation,
    including encouraging strong STEM students to
    consider teaching as an appropriate career path
  • A paradigm shift of RespectProfessionalismMutual
    Benefit
  • Teachers learn from STEM faculty
  • STEM faculty learn from teachers
  • There are no quick fixesthe substantive
    improvement of K-12 STEM education
    requires long-term attention from people who are
    committed to long-term solutions

21
  • New National Impact Report

22
What are we learning?
  • Learning progressions provide a new way to build
    conceptual knowledge in the science curriculum 
  • The partnership project entitled Culturally
    relevant ecology, learning progressions and
    environmental literacy is driven by an
    environmental science literacy framework around
    learning progressions within core science and
    mathematics concepts. The project engages the
    research and education prowess within four
    research sites of the NSF-funded Long Term
    Ecological Research (LTER) Network with 22 K-12
    schools/districts, with direct impacts on over
    250 science and mathematics teachers and 70,000
    students of highly diverse backgrounds. The
    learning progressions are organized around three
    key science strands (carbon, water, and
    biodiversity) and a mathematical strand
    (quantitative reasoning and the mathematics of
    modeling) all of these are further connected by
    the theme of education for citizenship.

23
What are we learning?
Multiple strategies enhance opportunities for
students to be prepared for, have access to, and
be encouraged to participate and succeed in
challenging mathematics and/or science
courses In collaboration with the College Board
and Harvard Medical School, the Boston Science
Partnership core higher education partners the
University of MassachusettsBoston and
Northeastern University have provided workshops
and institutes for teachers, university-based
laboratory programs for students and teachers,
summer bridge programs for entering AP
students, classroom volunteer support and a
full-length practice exam for students. To help
lead some of these activities, the BSP recruited
experienced AP teachers with the long-term goal
of developing them into endorsed College Board
consultants.
24
Boston Science Partnership
The Boston Science Partnership provides
intensive, year-round support to Advanced
Placement (AP) science classrooms throughout the
Boston Public Schools to support the districts
growth of student enrollment in AP science
programs. Between 2000 and 2009, the number of
Boston Public Schools students taking AP science
exams has dramatically increased from 183 to 781.
25
What are we learning?
  • Peer-enhanced classrooms enable teachers to use
    assistants in their classes and student
    achievement improves as schools restructure
  • Based on early successes in an intensive summer
    school setting, the MSPinNYC, involving the City
    University of New York (CUNY) in partnership with
    the NYC Department of Education, developed a
    model to change classroom instruction during the
    academic year called the Peer Enhanced
    Restructured Classroom (PERC). This model uses
    students who have previously passed the course as
    peer teachers. The teacher actually does little
    direct teaching to the class. Rather, the
    teacher learns to work through the student peer
    teachers, effectively teaching through the peers.
    Activities designed by the teacher are used by
    the peer teachers to engage and support learning
    in the classroom. The role of the teacher
    changes from one primarily defined by supporting
    learning through direct interaction with students
    to that of being an effective manager.

26
MSPinNYC

Passing Rates of Students Sitting for the New
York State-Mandated Regents Exam in Integrated
Algebra or Living Environments
  • Pre-Pilot
  • Spring 2008
  • Large school
  • 3 teachers 2 IA, 2 LE
  • N IA 80 NLE 30
  • Pilot
  • Academic Year 2008-2009
  • Four schools, 2 large, 2 small
  • 11 teachers 7 math, 4 science
  • N IA 383 NLE 201
  • Field Trial
  • PERC Summer School 2009
  • 2 Sites Hunter College,
  • New World High School
  • 3 IA classes 3 LE classes
  • N IA 65 NLE 44

In the 2008-2009 Academic year, the MSPinNYC ran
a pilot field trial that involved four high
schools, eleven teachers, and nearly 600 students
in NYC. In control type "A", students are
randomly placed into the experimental versus
control class, but the two classes are taught by
different teachers. In control type "B", the
control classes are taught by the same teacher in
a traditional classroom. Lastly, in control type
"C" the student population is not the same in the
control and experimental classes.
27
What are we learning?
  • K-12 Engineering Education is ready for prime
    time  
  • The University of Texas at Austin's Cockrell
    School of Engineering is partnering with the
    successful UTeach Natural Sciences program and
    the Austin Independent School District to develop
    and deliver UTeachEngineering, an innovative,
    design- and challenge-based curriculum for
    preparing secondary teachers of engineering. To
    meet the growing need for engineering teachers in
    Texas, and to serve as a model in engineering
    education across the nation, UTeachEngineering
    has the following four professional development
    pathways to teacher preparedness, two for
    in-service teachers and two for pre-service
    teachers 1. UTeach Master of Arts in
    Science and Engineering Education (MASEE)
    2. Engineering Summer Institutes for Teachers
    (ESIT) 3. Engineering Certification Track
    for Physics Majors and 4. Teacher
    Preparation Track for Engineering Majors.

28
What are we learning?
New tools and instruments, with documented
reliability validity, help professional
developers accurately assess the content that
teachers need to know for the teaching of math
and science   The Misconception Oriented
Standards-based Assessment Resource for Teachers
in Life Science (MOSART-LS) project develops
rigorous Distractor Driven Multiple Choice
assessment tools that aid in generating
evidence-based measures of professional
developments impact on K-8 teachers' life
science subject-matter knowledge and relevant
pedagogical content knowledge. This work
utilizes peer-reviewed research studies of
student conceptions in order to generate
specialized assessments. These assessments
measure the degree to which teachers hold the
accepted scientific view represented by each of
the 31 K-8 Content Standards in life science.
The project is developing 250 valid new items and
gathering data from a nationally representative
sample of 8000 students and their teachers.
29
What are we learning?
  • Cyber-enabled tools promote professional learning
    communities, and enhance teaching and learning
  • The Institute for Chemistry Literacy through
    Computational Science (ICLCS) is preparing rural
    Illinois chemistry teachers for the 21st Century
    through content, computational tools, and
    teaching methodology by building a virtual
    professional learning community among
    researchers, faculty and students. ICLCS
    Fellows enroll in a three-credit hour
    graduate-level chemistry course during the
    academic year delivered through Moodle, an open
    source course development tool that supports the
    virtual learning community. Fellows post
    reflections on their teaching, share materials,
    interact with faculty mentors, and attend online
    presentations to enhance their chemistry content
    knowledge. Exercises are designed to foster
    expertise in software use through building
    molecules, performing geometry optimizations,
    measuring bond distances and angles, determining
    energies, and viewing surfaces.

30
  • Funding Opportunities

31
FY 2010 MSP SolicitationNSF 10-XXX
  • In this solicitation, NSF will likely support six
    types of awards
  • Partnerships
  • Targeted
  • Institute
  • MSP-Start
  • Phase II
  • Research, Evaluation and Technical Assistance
    (RETA)
  • Innovation through Institutional Integration (I3)

32
Innovative partnerships to improve K-12 student
achievement in math and science
  • Targeted focus on studying and solving teaching
    and learning issues within a specific grade range
    or at a critical juncture in education, and/or
    within a specific disciplinary focus in math or
    the sciences
  • Institute focus on meeting national needs for
    teacher leaders/master teachers who have deep
    disciplinary content knowledge and are prepared
    to become intellectual leaders in math and
    science in their schools and districts
  • MSP-Start for those new to the MSP program, to
    support the necessary data analysis, project
    design, evaluation and team building activities
    needed to develop a full MSP Targeted or
    Institute Partnership

33
FY 2010 MSP Solicitation continued
  • Phase II for prior NSF MSP awardees, focus on
    specific innovative areas of their work that, if
    supported through additional research, will
    advance knowledge and understanding in specific
    area(s)
  • Research, Evaluation and Technical Assistance
    (RETA) projects that develop tools to assess
    the partnerships progress, build evaluation
    capacity and conduct focused research.
    (Not partnerships)

34
What Makes a Proposal Competitive?
  • Original ideas that go beyond the commonplace
    innovation
  • Succinct, focused project plan
  • Rationale and evidence of potential effectiveness
  • Sufficient detail provided
  • Realistic amount of work
  • Strength of the Partnership team
  • Potential contribution to knowledge
  • Strong evaluation plan

35
Innovation through Institutional Integration (I3)
  • I3 challenges institutions to think strategically
    about the creative integration of NSF-funded
    awards, with particular emphasis on awards
    managed through programs in the Directorate for
    Education and Human Resources (EHR), but not
    limited to those awards
  • In FY 2010, proposals are solicited in multiple
    EHR programs that advance I3 goals CREST, GSE,
    HBCU-UP, ITEST, LSAMP, MSP, Noyce, RDE, and TCUP
  • All I3 proposals are reviewed in competition with
    one another
  • An institution may submit only one I3 proposal in
    only one program Provost is PI Does not affect
    submission to other programs
  • April 7, 2010 due date for submission

36
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37
Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program
  • Initiated by Act of Congress in 2002
  • Reauthorized in 2007 (America COMPETES Act)
  • To encourage talented mathematics, science, and
    engineering undergraduates to pursue teaching
    careers
  • To encourage STEM professionals to become
    teachers
  • To prepare Master Teachers

38
Noyce Scholarship ProgramFY 2010 Solicitation
(NSF 10-514)
  • Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Track
  • Scholarships (at least 10,000 per year) for
    undergraduate STEM majors preparing to become
    K-12 Teachers
  • Summer internships for freshmen and sophomores
  • Stipends (at least 10,000 for 1 year) for STEM
    professionals seeking to become K-12 teachers
  • Recipients commit to teaching in a high need
    school district for 2 years for each year of
    scholarship/stipend support
  • NSF Teaching Fellowships Master Teaching
    Fellowships (TF/MTF) Track
  • Fellowships for STEM professionals receiving
    teacher certification through a masters degree
    program
  • Fellowships for science and math teachers
    preparing to become Master Teachers

39
Noyce Scholarship Program NSF 10-514 Important
Dates
  • Letters of Intent (optional)
  • February 9, 2010
  • Full Proposal Deadline
  • March 10, 2010
  • Questions jprival_at_nsf.gov

40
Other Opportunities for Funding
  • Advanced Technological Education (ATE)
  • Focuses on the education of technicians for the
    high-technology fields that drive our nation's
    economy in part through programs that are
    designed to improve existing as well as
    prospective K-12 teachers' technological
    understanding to provide them with experiences
    to use in engaging students in real world
    technological problems and to strengthen their
    preparation in science and mathematics overall
  • Course, Curriculum and Laboratory Improvement
    (CCLI)
  • Supports efforts to create, adapt, and
    disseminate new learning materials and teaching
    strategies, develop faculty expertise, implement
    educational innovations, assess learning and
    evaluate innovations, and conduct research on
    STEM teaching and learning

41
Other Opportunities for Funding
  • NSF Scholarships in Science, Technology,
    Engineering, and Mathematics (S-STEM)
  • Makes grants to institutions of higher education
    to support scholarships for academically
    talented, financially needy students, enabling
    them to enter the workforce following completion
    of an associate, baccalaureate, or graduate level
    degree in science and engineering disciplines.

42
Tools and Instruments? A few reminders from past
presentations
  • Evidence An Essential Tool Planning for and
    Gathering Evidence Using the Design-Implementation
    -Outcomes (DIO) Cycle of Evidence
  • Learning Mathematics for Teaching / Mathematical
    Knowledge for Teaching web-based Teacher
    Knowledge Assessment system (Harvard U., PI
    Heather Hill U. of Michigan, PI Geoffrey Phelps)
  • Assessing Teacher Learning About Science Teaching
    (ATLAST) (Horizon Research, Inc., PI Sean Smith)
  • Misconception Oriented Standards-based Assessment
    Resource for Teachers (MOSART) physical, earth,
    and life sciences (Harvard U., PI Philip
    Sadler)
  • MSPnet.org Toolbox (TERC, PI Joni Falk)
  • Online Evaluation Resource Library (oerl.sri.com,
    SRI.com)
  • Surveys of Enacted Curriculum (Wisconsin Center
    for Educational Research and CCSSO)
  • Distributed Leadership for Middle School Math
    Education (Northwestern U., PI Jim Spillane)
  • Thinking About Mathematics Instruction (EDC, PI
    Barbara Scott Nelson)

43
Back to those Persisting Challenges?
  • Capturing the Challenges and continuing the
    conversation into the breakout session Which
    will be MUCH MORE INTERACTIVE!

44
Website for MSP at NSF http//www.nsf.gov Click
on Program Area Education Click on Division of
Undergraduate Education (DUE) Click on Math and
Science Partnership Program
Website for MSPnethttp//mspnet.org
45
Mathematics and Science Partnership (MSP) Programs
  • U.S. Department of Education
  • San Diego Regional Meeting
  • February 2010
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