Project Activities
The team will carry out a randomized experimental design to test the effects of this intervention. Targeting schools serving high numbers of students who are traditionally underrepresented in mathematics, including English learners, African American and Latino students, as well as students from low socioeconomic groups, the team plans to investigate the extent to which algebra teaching strategies may differentially impact various subgroups.
Structured Abstract
Setting
The study will take place in middle schools that serve populations of students historically underrepresented in higher education. San Diego City Schools and the San Mateo County of Office of Education have agreed to recruit teachers for participation in the study.
Sample
The target population will be algebra teachers and their students in public middle schools in California.
Intervention
The proposed study builds on the work of the Video Cases for Mathematics Professional Development Project out of San Diego State University Foundation, which developed a series of professional development materials using video cases. These materials, Learning and Teaching Linear Functions (LTLF), are designed to enable teachers to deepen their understanding of ways to conceptualize and represent algebra content within their teaching practice.
Research design and methods
The team will use a randomized experimental design to test the benefits of LTLF. The team will also carry out a qualitative study of a smaller sample of teachers utilizing classroom observations and interviews in order to validate and explain quantitative findings and to identify factors that influence the success of the pedagogical approach. Study data sources and the application of multi-level methodologies will enable us to trace the link from professional development for teachers to changes in their classroom practices and student learning in algebra, and to examine the ways in which student- and teacher-level variables influence performance.
Key measures
Measures of students' opportunity to learn, teachers' mathematics content knowledge, and multiple measures of student learning will be collected. In addition, an innovative measure of instructional practice based on the analysis of classroom artifacts will be used.
Data analytic strategy
The team will use multi-level models to test the causal impact of content focused professional development on teacher practice and student learning.
People and institutions involved
IES program contact(s)
Products and publications
Products: Products will include evidence as to the effectiveness of an existing professional development program to improve teacher performance in ways that are linked to increases in middle school student learning and achievement in algebra and a narrowing of the achievement gap. Peer-reviewed publications will also be produced.
Proceeding
Seago, N., and Carroll, C. (2013). Learning and Teaching Linear Functions. In Proceedings of the 35th Annual Conference of the North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education (pp. 869-872). Chicago: PME-NA.
Seago, N., Carroll, C., Hanson, T., and Schneider, S. (2014). The Impact of Learning and Teaching Linear Functions Professional Development. In Proceedings of the 38th Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, Volume 5 (pp. 137-145). Vancouver, BC: PME-NA.
** This project was submitted to and funded under Teacher Quality: Mathematics and Science Education in FY 2010.
Questions about this project?
To answer additional questions about this project or provide feedback, please contact the program officer.