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Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

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Page 1: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose

Patrick CallahanCo-Director, California Mathematics Project

UCLA

Page 2: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

The Common Core is not just a list of topics to teach in a given grade, but rather a description of the mathematics students are expected to accomplish. Current courses titled "Algebra" or "Geometry" will very likely not provide opportunities for students to accomplish the mathematics described in the Common Core. We will discuss significant changes in expectations in algebra and geometry and practical steps that teachers, schools, and districts can start doing immediately to transition towards these new expectations.

Page 3: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

What do we mean by implementing the Common Core?

Page 4: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

I heard you have fully implemented the common core

in your district!

That’s right! We chose to go Traditional.

Page 5: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

We used to teach Algebra 1, Geometry, and Algebra 2.

Now we are teaching Algebra 1, Geometry, and Algebra 2.

Doing Common Core is a lot easier than I thought it’d be!

Page 6: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

“fully implemented?”

From a student’s perspective the first time the Common Core could be fully implemented is a student graduating in 2024.

Before that time every student will experience a hybrid of Common Core and previous mathematics.

Page 7: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

“fully implemented?”

From a student’s perspective the first time the Common Core could be fully implemented is a student graduating in 2024.

Before that time every student will experience a hybrid of Common Core and previous mathematics.

CONGRATS CLASS OF 2014 !

You have experienced about 7.692% Common Core!

Page 8: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Common CoreFully Implemented!

It’s easy!Ask me how I did it.

Page 9: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

With a little $$$ we took our old textbook…

Page 10: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

And bought new Common Core

textbooks!

Page 11: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Implementation and Textbooks

Page 12: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Implementation and Textbooks

Page 13: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Implementation vs Transition

The word “implementation” tends to refer to the policy aspects of adopting the Common Core.

In a policy sense you can be “fully implemented” right away.

Another, more student-centric, approach is to think in terms of “transition” rather than “implementation”.

This is a pragmatic approach that acknowledges that student, teachers, and systems are where they are now and that it will take time to move the system to the Common Core.

I encourage thinking strategically about at minimum a three-year transition plan.Don’t try to do everything at once. Have focus and purpose!

Page 14: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Transition to What?

We use the phrase “implement the Common Core”

or “transition to the Common Core”

but what does that mean?

What exactly are the Common Core Standards?

Page 15: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Common Core Standards, what they are NOT and what they ARE:

The Common Core standards are not a list of topics to be covered or taught.

The Common Core State Standards are a description of the mathematics students are expected to understand and use, not a curriculum. The standards are not the building blocks of curriculum, they are the achievements we want students to attain as the result of curriculum. To quote page 5 of the Common Core State Standards for Mathematics (Common Core): “Just because topic A appears before topic B in the standards for a given grade, it does not necessarily mean that topic A must be taught before topic B. A teacher might prefer to teach topic B before topic A, or might choose to highlight connections by teaching topic A and topic B at the same time. Or, a teacher might prefer to teach a topic of his or her own choosing that leads, as a byproduct, to students reaching the standards for topics A and B.”

Page 16: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

How are the CCSS different?The CCSS are reverse engineered from an analysis of what students need to be college and career ready.

The design principals were focus and coherence. (No more mile-wide inch deep laundry lists of standards)

The CCSS in Mathematics have two sections:CONTENT and PRACTICES

The Mathematical Content is what students should know.The Mathematical Practices are what students should do.

Real life applications and mathematical modeling are essential.

Page 17: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

1. Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them.2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively.3. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of

others.4. Model with mathematics.5. Use appropriate tools strategically.6. Attend to precision.7. Look for and make use of structure.8. Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning.

Mathematical Practice

Page 18: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

CCSS Mathematical PracticesO

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REASONING AND EXPLAINING2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively3. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others

MODELING AND USING TOOLS4. Model with mathematics5. Use appropriate tools strategically

SEEING STRUCTURE AND GENERALIZING7. Look for and make use of structure8. Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning

Page 19: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Shifts in Content

Because the Common Core were reverse engineered from a definition of Career and College Ready, there were shifts in content.

How is Algebra different?

More applications, modeling, equivalence

Less algorithms, answer-getting, simplifying

Page 20: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

HS Algebra: Families of Function Cycle

CONTEXTS(identifying quantities in meaningful situations)

FUNCTIONS(modeling, relationships between quantities)

EQUATIONS(solving, manipulation, symbolism)

GENERALIZATION(structure, precision, abstracting)

Families of Functions: Linear (one variable) Linear (two variables) Quadratic Polynomial and Rational Exponential Trigonometric

Page 21: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Conrad Wolfram’s TED Talk:

What is math?1. Posing the right questions2. Real world math formulation3. Computation4. Math formulation real world, verification

Page 22: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Conrad Wolfram’s TED Talk:

What is math?1. Posing the right questions2. Real world math formulation3. Computation4. Math formulation real world, verification

Humans are vastly better than computers at three of these.

Page 23: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Conrad Wolfram’s TED Talk:

What is math?1. Posing the right questions2. Real world math formulation3. Computation4. Math formulation real world, verification

Yet, we spend 80% or more of math instruction on the one that computers can do better than humans

Page 24: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Conrad Wolfram’s TED Talk:

What is math?1. Posing the right questions2. Real world math formulation3. Computation4. Math formulation real world, verification

Note: The CCSS would indentify Wolfram’s description of math in terms of Mathematical Practices: make sense of problems, model, use tools strategically.

Page 25: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Sample Algebra Worksheet

This should look familiar.What do you notice?

What is the mathematical goal?

What is the expectation of the student?

Page 26: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA
Page 27: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

A sample Algebra Exam

Page 28: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

A sample Algebra Exam

I typed #16 into Mathematica

Page 29: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA
Page 30: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA
Page 31: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Look at the circled answers.What do you notice?

Page 32: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

“Answer Getting”As Phil Daro has mentioned:There is a difference between

using problems to “get answers” and to learn mathematics.

This algebra exam sends a clear message to students:

Math is about getting answers.

Note also that there is no context, just numbers and expressions

Page 33: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

What are these assessing?

Page 34: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA
Page 35: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

SBAC Claims

Page 36: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

What evidence does this item support?

Page 37: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

What evidence does this item support?

Page 38: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Item from CST Algebra

Page 39: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

12th grade NAEP item

Page 40: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

12th grade NAEP item

11%

31%

39%

9%

3%

Page 41: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

SBAC Item

Page 42: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

New expectations require new Pathways

Page 43: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Changing expectationsThe trouble with course names

In the particular case of mathematics, there is a “vocabulary” around the names of mathematics courses that is likely to cause confusion not only for educators, but also for parents. “Algebra 1” is a course that, prior to CA CCSSM, has been taught in 8th grade to an increasing number of students. That same course name will be the default for ninth grade for most students who moving forward will complete the CA CCSSM for grade eight – a course that is more rigorous and more demanding than the earlier versions of “Algebra 1.” Even so, we expect the changes to cause confusion. The single most practical solution is to describe detailed course contents, in addition to course names, as a way of clearing up confusion until “Algebra I” as commonly used, refers to a ninth grade and not an eighth grade course

Page 44: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Changing expectations:Middle School is key

When the expectations for middles school mathematics were about speed and accuracy of computations it made sense to accelerate in middle school, and even skip grades.

This no longer makes sense.

Middle school mathematics is the key to success for all students. Rushing or skipping is a bad idea for almost all students.

Page 45: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

NCEE Report (May, 2013)http://www.ncee.org/college-and-work-ready/

Page 46: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

NCEE Summary Findings: Career and College Ready

1. Many community college career programs demand little or no use of mathematics. To the extent that they do use mathematics, the mathematics needed by first year students in these courses is almost exclusively middle school mathematics. But the failure rates in our community colleges suggest that many of them do not know that math very well. A very high priority should be given to the improvement of the teaching of proportional relationships including percent, graphical representations, functions, and expressions and equations in our schools, including their application to concrete practical problems.

Page 47: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

NCEE Summary Findings: Career and College Ready

3. It makes no sense to rush through the middle school mathematics curriculum in order to get to advanced algebra as rapidly as possible. Given the strong evidence that mastery of middle school mathematics plays a very important role in college and career success,  strong consideration should be given to spending more time, not less, on the mastery of middle school mathematics, and requiring students to master Algebra I no later than the end of their sophomore year in high school, rather than by the end of middle school. This recommendation should be read in combination with the preceding one. Spending more time on middle school mathematics is in fact a recommendation to spend more time making sure that students understand the concepts on which all subsequent mathematics is based. It does little good to push for teaching more advanced topics at lower grade levels if the students’ grasp of the underlying concepts is so weak that they cannot do the mathematics. Once students understand the basic concepts thoroughly, they should be able to learn whatever mathematics they need for the path they subsequently want to pursue more quickly and easily than they can now

Page 48: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Previous 8th grade CA standards

Page 49: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA
Page 50: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Common Core Grade 8 Curriculum Plan

Common Core is much more rigorous than previous middle school expectations.

Page 51: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

CA Framework on Acceleration

1. Decisions to accelerate students into the Common Core State Standards for higher mathematics before ninth grade should not be rushed.

Placing students into an accelerated pathway too early should be avoided at all costs. It is not recommended to compact the standards before grade seven to ensure that students are developmentally ready for accelerated content. In this document, compaction begins in seventh grade for both the traditional and integrated sequences.

Page 52: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

CA Framework on Acceleration

2. Decisions to accelerate students into higher mathematics before ninth grade must require solid evidence of mastery of prerequisite CA CCSSM.

3. Compacted courses should include the same Common Core State Standards as the non-compacted courses.

4. A menu of challenging options should be available for students after their third year of mathematics—and all students should be strongly encouraged to take mathematics in all years of high school.

Page 53: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Framework Suggested Pathways

Better than accelerating Middle School.

But doubling up is not necessary!

Page 54: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Framework Suggested Pathways

Better than accelerating Middle School.

But doubling up is not necessary! “Pre-calculus” is not necessary!

Page 55: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

A better pathway:

Enhanced means: Include the (+) standards, go deeper, more rigorous, not skim faster!

Page 56: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

Transitioning to Common Core:Focus and Purpose

Advice: Don’t try to do everything at once!

Start supporting the mathematical practices immediately. Focus on one or so per semester.

Consider a three-year roll out for the content.

Page 57: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

A template for planning

Page 58: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA
Page 59: Transitioning to the Common Core: Focus and Purpose Patrick Callahan Co-Director, California Mathematics Project UCLA

3 Year Content Roll Out9th 10th 11th

Year 1 Common Core Math Practices+Common CoreAlg 1 or Math 1

Common Core Math Practices+Whatever Content was in place

Common Core Math Practices+Whatever Content was in place

Year 2 Common Core Math Practices+Common CoreAlg 1 or Math 1

Common Core Math Practices+Common CoreGeom or Math 2

Common Core Math Practices+Whatever Content was in place

Year 3 Common Core Math Practices+Common CoreAlg 1 or Math 1

Common Core Math Practices+Common CoreGeom or Math 2

Common Core Math Practices+Common CoreAlg 2 or Math 3

This applies to other grade bands too: K-2, 3-5, and 6-8