Title: Exploring the Impact of the Revised Math Standards
1Exploring the Impact of the Revised Math Standards
- Lexie Domaradzki
- Assistant Superintendent
- Teaching Learning
- Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction
- lexie.domaradzki_at_k12.wa.us
2Overview of the Session
- Goals for the session
- Discuss recent legislation
- SB6534-Standards Revisions
- SB2598-RFI, Curricula Recommendations
- Discuss Instructional Materials Review to select
three math curricula for elementary, middle and
high school - Timeline, Process
- Discuss state professional development plan
- Summer 2008
- Facilitator Recruitment
- Regional Delivery
- Â
3Quote to begin.
- Never before have we had so little time to do so
much! - Franklin Roosevelt
4Status of Legislation Standards (Bill 6534)
- By May 15, 2008
- Receive report of national consultants review of
Feb 29 version of Standards - Consult WA Mathematics Panel about the
consultants recommendations - Hold public hearing
- Direct modifications to consultants report
- Forward final report and recommendations to OSPI
for implementation
5Status of Legislation Standards (Bill 6534)
- By July 1, 2008
- OSPI shall revise the mathematics standards to
conform precisely to and incorporate each of the
recommendations of the State Board of Education - By July 31, 2008
- Approve adoption of the standards
- OR
- Develop a plan to do this by September
6Possible Schedule Standards
- By April 2008
- SBE approves K-8 standards
- By May 2008
- SBE approves standards for Algebra 1, Geometry,
Integrated Mathematics 1, Integrated Mathematics
2 - By July 2008
- SBE approves standards for Algebra 2, Integrated
Mathematics 3
7Update Legislation WASL (Bill 3166)
- Shorten the tests for Grades 3-8
- Create diagnostic tools (NOTE diagnostic is
not defined) - By 2010, create end-of-course tests for Algebra
1 and Integrated Mathematics 1 - By 2011, create end-of-course tests for
Geometry and Integrated Mathematics 2 - In 2013, end-of-course tests may substitute for
10th grade WASL - In 2014, end-of-course tests replace the 10th
grade WASL
8Graduation Requirements State Board
- 3rd mathematics credit required in 2013
- SBE will determine the content of permissible
courses
9Revised K-12 Mathematics StandardsFeb 29 version
- K-8
- Core Content, Additional Key Content, Core
Processes - High School (now organized by courses)
- Algebra 1, Geometry, Algebra 2
- Mathematics 1, Mathematics 2, Mathematics 3
- also, topics for possible 4th year courses
10Revised K-12 Mathematics StandardsFeb 29
version Plattner Review
- The new mathematics standards for grades K8 are
very close to excellent. These standards do
compare favorably with the best in the nation and
the world. The Performance Expectations
(Expectations) are specific, measurable,
important mathematical topics that are both
focused at particular grades and developed across
grade levels.
11Revised K-12 Mathematics StandardsFeb 29
version Plattner Review
- While they the high school standards are much
improved from OSPIs January version, further
revision is needed. Some areas, such as
occasional imprecision of language, is similar to
grades K8 and just as easily fixed. Other areas,
such as missing content and content organization,
are more problematic.
12Revised K-12 Mathematics StandardsFeb 29
version Plattner Review
- We first want to commend the substantial work of
Washington educators and community leaders, OSPI,
and the Dana Center. Washington has broken new
ground in its approach to organizing grade level
content by priorities rather than mathematical
strands. The writing teams were inclusive, the
stakeholder feedback extensive. The document
clearly is thoughtful and written with
mathematical expertise.
13Revised K-12 Mathematics StandardsFeb 29
version Plattner Review
- Standards inherently involve tensions. They are
goal statements about which different people,
even different experts, will have varied
opinions. They require negotiations, and
represent compromises among varied legitimate
participants and groups. - Confrey, Jere, Tracing the Evolution of
Mathematics Content Standards in the United
States Looking Back and Projecting Forward
towards National Standards, a paper prepared for
the Conference on K12 Mathematics Curriculum
Standards, sponsored by CSMC, NCTM, Achieve,
College Board, MAA, ASA (February 2007).
14Revised K-12 Mathematics StandardsFeb 29
version Plattner Recommendations
- 1. An exemplar review on the OSPI February
standards K8 and 912, similar to last years
comparison to other states, countries and
national frameworks using the nine criteria to
provide external validation that these are the
best standards. In order to compress the timeline
we suggest fewer grade levels and fewer
documents. -
- 2. Substantive edit for grades K8. The content
is very good language is almost ready. These
standards are so close that work could be
completely very quickly. -
- 3. A revision of the high school standards. The
core content of the subjects is in the document
and many of the examples are excellent. The
language needs to be tightened and there is some
more work to be done on the content. This means
it will take slightly longer than the grade K8
work.
15What will be the impact of the revised standards?
- SB2598 -- Instructional Materials Review
- Issue a Request For Proposal to publishers to
build a comprehensive Washington State K12
mathematics program - Includes basic curricula, diagnostic and
- Intervention materials
- Within 30 days after the adoption of final
revised standards - Target completion of analysis Dec 1 2008
- Within Six Months after the standards are
adopted, OSPI shall present to the State Board a
recommendation for no more than 3 basic
mathematics curricula for Elementary, Middle, HS
16Instructional Materials Review
- Three Phases of Review of Instructional Materials
- Phase I
- Review K-8 Basic Curricula
- Phase II
- Review K-8 Stand Alone Supplemental and
Diagnostic Assessments - Phase III
- Review Secondary Basic Curricula
- Review High School Stand Alone Supplemental and
Diagnostics Assessments
17Timeline once K 8 Standards are approved
- Late Spring
- Review of K 8 Basic Curricula Materials
- Early Summer
- Data analysis of review results
- Written report of Review Process and Results
- Mid Summer
- Submit recommendation to State Board of Education
for K 8 Materials - Fall
- Begin High School review once HS Standards are
approved
18Considerations for the field
- Recent adopters (School Districts who recently
adopted materials) - How do the current materials align to the revised
Washington State standards? - What supplemental materials should be used to
help fill the gaps? - Near future adopters/Districts with older
materials - (School Districts who have been holding funds
until the recommendations are made) - Which materials are most aligned to the revised
Washington State standards? - Are supplemental materials necessary to
strengthen the materials?
19Where does your district stand?
- Discuss one of the two questions
- Where does your districts stand in the adoption
process? - What will the implications of the Instructional
Materials recommendations have on your work?
20Instructional Materials Review
- OSPI plan to support districts in WA State
- Data collected regarding programs being used in
WA - Review Process to include most used programs as
well as voluntary submission by publishers - Rank order results as well as provide
recommendation of 3 basic curricula
21Materials Currently Being Used in Washington
- Data Collection
- Two sets of data collected
- One collected and organized by School District
- One set collected and organized by number of
students - Instructional Materials Review will be sure to
address the programs being used with most
students in the state
22National Mathematics Advisory Panel
- The recent publication of the National
Mathematics Advisory Panel will serve as pivotal
information for the design of the Instructional
Materials review - The National Mathematics Advisory Panel was
released in the second week of March, 2008
23National Mathematics Advisory PanelBenchmarks
Fractions
- 1) By the end of Grade 4, students should be able
to identify and represent fractions and decimals,
and compare them on a number line or with other
common representations of fractions and decimals.
- 2) By the end of Grade 5, students should be
proficient with comparing fractions and decimals
and common percents, and with the addition and
subtraction of fractions and decimals. - 3) By the end of Grade 6, students should be
proficient with multiplication and division of
fractions and decimals.
24National Mathematics Advisory PanelBenchmarks
Fractions
- 4) By the end of Grade 6, students should be
proficient with all operations involving positive
and negative integers. - 5) By the end of Grade 7, students should be
proficient with all operations involving positive
and negative fractions. - 6) By the end of Grade 7, students should be able
to solve problems involving percent, ratio, and
rate and extend this work to proportionality.
25National Mathematics Advisory PanelBenchmarks
Geometry and Measurement
- 1) By the end of Grade 5, students should be able
to solve problems involving perimeter and area of
triangles and all quadrilaterals having at least
one pair of parallel sides (i.e., trapezoids). - 2) By the end of Grade 6, students should be able
to analyze the properties of two-dimensional
shapes and solve problems involving perimeter and
area, and analyze the properties of three
dimensional shapes and solve problems involving
surface area and volume. - 3) By the end of Grade 7, students should be
familiar with the relationship between similar
triangles and the concept of the slope of a line.
26National Mathematics Advisory PanelInstruction
- Instructional practice should be informed by
high-quality research, when available, and by the
best professional judgment and experience of
accomplished classroom teachers. High-quality
research does not support the contention that
instruction should be either entirely student
centered or teacher directed. Research
indicates that some forms of particular
instructional practices can have a positive
impact under specified conditions.
27National Mathematics Advisory PanelK-8 Curriculum
- The mathematics curriculum in Grades PreK8
should be streamlined and should emphasize a
well-defined set of the most critical topics in
the early grades.
28National Mathematics Advisory PanelEffort
- Use should be made of what is clearly known from
rigorous research about how children learn,
especially by recognizing a) the advantages for
children in having a strong start b) the
mutually reinforcing benefits of conceptual
understanding, procedural fluency, and automatic
(i.e., quick and effortless) recall of facts and
c) that effort, not just inherent talent, counts
in mathematical achievement.
29Mathematics Professional Development
- Goal
- Support thousands of K 12 teachers with
understanding the revised standards and the
mathematics content within those standards - By May 01, OSPI will make a decision about
whether to schedule professional development for
high school in Summer 2008. That decision will
depend on the extent of revision and editing
suggested by the SBE consultant in the exemplar
review and analysis. - Tool Box
- Uniform set of materials to be delivered in
professional development session that are focused
on revised standards and mathematics content - Focus of professional development will not
involve pedagogy - Focus of professional development will be on
deepening teachers understanding of mathematics
in their area of instruction
30Mathematics Professional Development
- Regional Delivery System
- Facilitator Recruitment (training, summer
delivery) - Goal Recruit up to 300 Facilitators Statewide
- Applications due April 2, 2008
- Notification given April 18, 2008
- ESD Math Coordinators will support PD
Facilitators in organizing, registering, and
possibly delivering training - Facilitators will receive 5 days of training to
prepare for summer work - Professional Development Tool Kit Content
- 2 days focused on Revised Standards
- 2 days focused on one area of Mathematics Content
31Mathematics Professional Development
- Regional delivery system
- Several ways to access the professional
development - Large School Districts
- Many large districts sending teams of
Facilitators - Will deliver training in home districts
- ESD Regions
- Conducted in groups of no more than 100
- Dates recorded and tracked by Math Coordinators
- Registration through ESDs
32Mathematics Professional Development
- Regional delivery system
- ESD Math Coordinators
- Schedule and track Professional Development
activities that will be occurring in their region - Share data with OSPI weekly
- OSPI
- Provide materials to facilitators for delivering
professional development - Maintain a website where all teachers can access
professional development sessions, statewide
33Mathematics Professional Development
- OSPI Mathematics Institute 4 days in late June,
Spokane - 2 days on Revised Standards
- 2 days on Mathematical Content
- Registration on Events Manager, OSPI
- OSPI Summer Institute July 29, 30, 31, Aug 1
Tacoma - 4 day mathematics strand
- 2 days on Revised Standards
- 2 days on Mathematical Content
- Registration on Events Manager, OSPI
34Mathematics Professional Development
- Intention To create a network of experts
statewide that can serve as leaders in supporting
our Mathematics teachers in the State of
Washington - Current work Development of Materials
- Selecting Writing Team
- Outline Activities
- Write drafts, get feedback, revise
- Present to facilitators, make minor adjustments
- Support Facilitators as they deliver professional
development
35Quote for the day..
- You cant wring your hands and roll up your
sleeves at the same time - Michelle Brown