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National Education Standards Mathematics

National Education Standards

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National Education Standards. Mathematics. Are standards hard to write?. Organization is difficult. Categories are hard to pick. How is it done?. Common Core has 10 content areas. Number Quantity Expressions Equations Functions Modeling Shape Coordinates Probability Statistics. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: National Education Standards

National Education Standards

Mathematics

Page 2: National Education Standards

Organization is difficult. Categories are hard to pick.

How is it done?

Are standards hard to write?

Page 3: National Education Standards

Number Quantity Expressions Equations Functions Modeling Shape Coordinates Probability Statistics

Common Core has 10 content areas

Page 4: National Education Standards

Number properties and Operations Measurement Geometry Data Analysis, Statistics, and Probability Algebra

NAEP has 5

Page 5: National Education Standards

4th grade Number Geometric Shapes and Measures Data Display

8th grade Number Algebra Geometry Data and Chance

TIMSS has 3 for 4th grade 4 for 8th

Page 6: National Education Standards

Space and shape Change and relationships Quantity Uncertainty

PISA has 4 areas

Page 7: National Education Standards

But, it isn’t that important.The structure of the standards doesn’t matter that much.

So, organization is difficult.

Page 8: National Education Standards

Picking content is easy! Involve mathematicians. Oops! What’s your image of

mathematicians? Your image is wrong! Think: Mathematicians are 13th grade

teachers. Survey us. Look at our placement tests. Easy!

Anything easy about standards?

Page 9: National Education Standards

PISA◦ They don’t bother. Not about math.

NAEP◦ Has content and kitchen sink.

Common Core◦ Thinks (minimal) college readiness.

TIMSS◦ Listens to mathematicians.

Content Choice Styles

Page 10: National Education Standards

Clarity is easy. Use simple, precise, mathematical

language.

What else is easy?

Page 11: National Education Standards

Compare and order whole numbers. Solve problems involving proportions. Compute with fractions and decimals. Solve problems involving percents and

proportions.

Very nice, straightforward, clear.

TIMSS

Page 12: National Education Standards

Know when and how to use standard algorithms, and perform them flexibly, accurately, and efficiently.

Clean it up! Know how to use standard algorithms

efficiently. Do you really have to mention “accurately?”

Common Core, A step down.

Page 13: National Education Standards

Create and translate between different representations of algebraic expressions, equations, and inequalities (e.g., linear, quadratic, exponential, or trigonometric) using symbols, graphs, tables, diagrams, or written descriptions.

Yikes! Analyze by counting. Forget create. Use only “translate.”

NAEP, much further down

Page 14: National Education Standards

Expressions Equations inequalities

Three things

Page 15: National Education Standards

Linear Quadratic Exponential trigonometric

4 functions

Page 16: National Education Standards

Symbols Graphs Tables Diagrams Written descriptions

5 representations

Page 17: National Education Standards

20 different translations 4 different functions 3 different mathematical relationships Total: 240 standards in one sentence! Oops, forgot “create” 3x4x5=60 Total: 300 standards in one sentence! Clarity, simplicity? No!

Translations among the 5

Page 18: National Education Standards

Elegant computations Recognizing shapes and patterns Representing changes in a comprehensible

form Understanding the fundamental types of

change

This is not guidance with clarity!

PISA, lowest of all

Page 19: National Education Standards

Some parts of standards are not as important as other parts of the same standard.

Some standards are not as important as other standards.

Some content areas are not as important as other content areas.

Biggest Difficulty – Setting Priorities

Page 20: National Education Standards

Create and translate between different representations of algebraic expressions, equations, and inequalities (e.g., linear, quadratic, exponential, or trigonometric) using symbols, graphs, tables, diagrams, or written descriptions.

Tables to written descriptions, not as important as symbols to graphs.

Recall NAEP

Page 21: National Education Standards

Compute with fractions and decimals.

Use data from experiments to predict the chances of future outcomes.

One is essential math. One is pretty important science.

TIMSS standards comparison

Page 22: National Education Standards

Probability and statistics are reasonable But They are 24% of the total standards. That’s unreasonable.

Common Core areas

Page 23: National Education Standards

TIMSS does it. They tell you what percentage of their test

will be on each area. Others don’t succeed. Even if you pick standards that are all

absolutely essential, some take more time. It is a difficult problem.

Setting priorities is difficult to fix