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RESEARCH ACTIVITIES
:: Mid-Atlantic Center for Mathematics Teaching and
Learning
Since 2000, faculty in the Center for Mathematics Education, in concert
with colleagues at the University
of Delaware and at the Pennsylvania
State University, have developed the Mid-Atlantic
Center for Mathematics Teaching and Learning (MAC-MTL) with support
from a grant from the National
Science Foundation (NSF). When it was funded, MAC-MTL was one of only
two such Centers for the Teaching and Learning funded by NSF; it is now
one of only ten such centers in science and mathematics across the country.
The original grant supported reexamination of doctoral education in mathematics
education and the development of revised programs within and across the
three campuses. This grant renewal involves a change in emphasis for the
MAC-MTL, supporting related research projects addressing teacher knowledge.
There are three central research questions that MAC-MTL is addressing:
- How do pre-service teachers develop mathematical and pedagogical knowledge
from content and methods courses and internship experiences?
- How do practicing teachers draw on and continue to develop mathematical
and pedagogical knowledge in the course of their professional work?
- What is the relationship between teachers’ mathematical and
pedagogical knowledge and student achievement?
Within this research framework, the University of Maryland is working
on efforts that address practicing teachers’ use of knowledge during
teaching as well as the relationship between teacher knowledge and student
achievement.
:: Case Studies of Algebra I Urban Teachers
Dr. Daniel Chazan and Dr. Whitney Johnson are conducting research for the case studies project,
supported by the MAC-MTL grant. The case studies project seeks to understand
how teachers utilize and develop their mathematical knowledge for teaching.
In the context of large-size, high poverty urban schools, the researchers
seek to understand how teachers of high stakes mathematics courses communicate
a sense of purpose to students for engaging with school mathematics.
In this context teachers' ability to connect students to critical mathematical
ideas is especially challenging. The researchers are interested in how
such teachers use their knowledge of data analysis and algebra to teach
state mandated Algebra 1 content. This project will result in case studies
of up to 12 teachers, as well as studies of their algebra knowledge
and statistical knowledge as it is utilized in and developed from instruction.
:: Quantitative Study of Teacher Knowledge
and Student Achievement
Dr. Patricia Campbell and Dr. Anna
Graeber are conducting research for the quantitative study project,
which is supported by the MAC-MTL grant. The project will assess the
mathematical and pedagogical knowledge of 175 upper elementary and 175
middle school teachers who are in their first 5 years of teaching, spacing
data collection over three consecutive school years. In each study year,
the researchers will also collect data indicating mathematics achievement
by students of the participating teachers. Analysis of the data will
allow the researchers to statistically model the effects of teacher
knowledge on student achievement, while also considering possible effects
of teacher preparation programs and student and school demographic characteristics.
For more detail on MAC-MTL research, see http://www.education.umd.edu/mac-mtl/whatwedo.htm
:: Connected Mathematics Project
Dr. James Fey serves as the Co-Principal Investigator
on the Connected Mathematics Project (CMP). CMP is a standards-based middle
school curriculum that emphasizes investigation of mathematical ideas
through collaborative problem solving. The Project is currently in the
final year of development, field-testing, and support for implementation
of a major revision.
:: Core-Plus Mathematics Project
Dr. James Fey serves as the Co-Principal Investigator
on the Core-Plus Mathematics Project, an NSF-funded curriculum project.
The Core-Plus Mathematics Project is in the fourth year of development,
field-testing, and support for implementation of a major revision to this
standards-based high school curriculum that emphasizes investigation of
mathematical ideas in the context of solving realistic quantitative problems.
:: High Quality Teaching Study
Dr. Anna Graeber is a senior researcher
on the High-Quality Teaching Study (HQT), which is supported by a grant
from the Interagency Education Research Initiative. The HQT is a four-year
study of teaching quality that focuses on what teachers do to help struggling
4th and 5th grade students succeed in reading and mathematics, as well
as how various education policies and organizational factors influence
the ability of teachers to scale up and sustain effective pedagogy over
time.
:: Mathematics Specialists in K-5 Schools
Dr. Patricia Campbell serves as Co-Principal
Investigator of an NSF-funded program examining the impact of elementary
mathematics specialists in cooperating schools in Virginia. Investigators
at the University of Maryland are responsible for the research component
associated with the program, investigating the program’s effectiveness
in terms of teacher change and student achievement in mathematics.
:: Thought Experiments in Mathematics Teaching
Dr. Daniel Chazan and Dr. Patricio Herbst
of the University of Michigan serve as the Principal Investigators for
the Thought Experiments in Mathematics Teaching project. This five-year
NSF-funded research project, awarded in May 2004, proposes four linked
studies focused on secondary mathematics teachers of algebra and geometry.
The researchers seek to understand how the practice of secondary mathematics
teaching shapes teachers' actions and ways of conceiving their role as
they meet subject-specific goals of the teaching of algebra and geometry.
The project pushes theoretical discussions about teaching into refined,
situated ways of understanding action in context. And, it seeks to develop
innovations in techniques for the study of mathematics teaching by allowing
the building of empirically based models of teachers' implicit thinking
in action and about action. A central aspect of the study is the development
of animations and comic strips of real and possible episodes of algebra
and geometry teaching. These animations and comic strips will be used
in study groups and summer academies as a research tool to elicit how
teachers think about teaching.
:: Examining the Statistical Understanding of
Pre-service Teachers
Dr. Aisling Leavy is involved in several
projects investigating the development of pre-service teachers’
understandings of distribution as expressed in the measures and representations
used to communicate aspects of a given distribution. Other work, in conjunction
with Dr. Lisa Boté, examines the strategies
used by pre-service elementary teachers to describe and index distributions
of data and investigates the influence of representational form on the
nature of representative values constructed.
Please see the Doctoral Students page
for information about the research activities of doctoral and postdoctoral
students in the Center for Mathematics Education.
Please see the Theses and Dissertations
page for links to the papers of former Master’s and Doctoral students
in the Center for Mathematics Education that are available in the University
of Maryland’s DRUM
database.
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