The Relevance and Significance of Mathematical Knowledge in Teachers
Hill, H.C., Rowan, B., and Ball, D.L. "Effects of Teachers' Mathematical Knowledge
for Teaching on Student Achievement." American Educational Research
Journal; (Summer 2005), Vol. 42, No. 2: 371-406.
In a similar study, the importance of non-pedagogical mathematical content knowledge among teachers was evident. This study highlights the practical implications and difficulties of teacher improvement programs whose purpose is to implement the conclusions about the importance of certain aspects of mathematics competency in teaching. It also relied partially on the evidence that certain aspects of mathematics competency in teachers corresponds to better learning and achievement even in the elementary grades where mathematical concepts are insufficiently complex to allow any knowledge difference in teachers to manifest itself in learner achievement.
According to this study, the recognition of correspondence between teacher knowledge of or academic achievement in mathematics and student benefit is largely useless without a more in-depth understanding of how and why teacher knowledge or achievement in mathematics translates into positive learning outcomes for students. The authors suggest that is particularly true with respect to using that information to design professional improvement programs for teachers. For example, it is important to know how to measure mathematical knowledge in teachers in connection with improving their performance.
Among the various criteria, the authors discuss the relatively low importance of the performance of teachers on mathematical proficiency tests and of their highest level of the academic study of mathematics in their own educational histories. As in the...
According to a British Study conducted on all students born in the first week of March 1958, and following them through adolescence and on until the age of twenty-three: There were no average differences between grouped and ungrouped schools because within the grouped schools, high-group students performed better than similar students in ungrouped schools, but low-group students did worse. Students in remedial classes performed especially poorly compared to ungrouped students
Communicating Mathematics It is important for teachers and students to be engaged in communicating mathematics for higher understanding and the building of problem solving skills. Understanding mathematics means to define the measures of quality and quantity that connections have with new ideas and existing ideas. The greater understanding comes from the greater connections of network ideas. The goals of elementary teaching is to teach mathematics in meaningful and understanding ways to
NPSAS was the only study in 1996 that encompassed the people who enrolled in the for-profit institutions which is why not even the very basic criteria of the for-profit sector and its educational setup has been well-recognized (Breneman, Pusser and Turner 2000; Chung, 2006). The confirmation that the students who had some sort of shortcoming whether in the financial sector, minority aspect or admittance-timeline factor were the ones who mainly
Nature of the ProblemPurpose of the ProjectBackground and Significance of the Problem Brain Development Specific Activities to engage students Data-Driven Instruction Community Component of Education Research QuestionsDefinition of TermsMethodology and Procedures Discussion & ImplicationsConclusions & Application ntroduction The goal of present-day educational reformers is to produce students with "higher-order skills" who are able to think independently about the unfamiliar problems they will encounter in the information age, who have become "problem solvers" and have "learned how to learn,
Summary The Keller/PSI approach to academic and professional training has been documented to improve student performance as measured by course completion rates and subject matter retention among students. On the other hand, there are considerable practical and technical problems implementing the Keller/PSI approach within traditional educational institutions. Meanwhile, there is little if any empirical evidence suggesting precisely how the Keller/PSI model benefits learning outside of the focus on the reduced deadline
(Brown, nd) Brown lists 'labor intensive' strategies for differentiation to include those as follows: Assessment, data analysis, and diagnosis; Flexible grouping; Tiered tasks; Anchor activities; Differentiated learning encounters; Learning contracts; Independent study. (Brown, nd) The work of Jahnine Blosser (2005) entitled: "Unit of Lessons: Safety in the Secondary Science Classroom" states that there is "a growing need to make all students understand science and the relevancy of science to their lives." Blosser notes that "many students learn differently
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now