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E-grāmata: Learning Over Time

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  • Formāts: 289 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jun-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Information Age Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781623965709
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  • Formāts: 289 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jun-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Information Age Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781623965709

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This book explores how children learn mathematics through learning trajectories, providing insights into their development and applications. It emphasizes conceptual understanding over procedural knowledge and highlights the importance of these trajectories in instruction, professional development, standards, and assessment.



The driving forces behind mathematics learning trajectories is the need to understand how children actually learn and make sense of mathematics—how they progress from prior knowledge, through intermediate understandings, to the mathematics target understandings—and how to use these insights to improve instruction and student learning. In this book, readers will come to understand what learning trajectories are, the research and methodology that are necessary for developing them, and gain insight into potential applications of learning trajectories.

A synthesis and research outcome in their own right, learning trajectories provide detailed description of instructionally-grounded development of mathematical concepts and reasoning from the perspective of student learning, and, overall, building on decades of accumulated experience in mathematics education research. However, their greater importance may lie in their potential as frameworks that contribute an unprecedented coherence across classroom instruction, professional development, standards, and assessment, by focusing squarely on conceptual understanding and reasoning instead of assessment-driven procedural knowledge. This potential was sufficiently compelling as an organizing framework to have been cited as a basis for the Common Core mathematics standards, the new mathematics learning expectations that are now consistent across most of the United States. (Among the conference attendees were the writers of the Common Core State Standards for Mathematics, at the beginning of the Standards drafting process.)

This book is an outgrowth of a conference on learning trajectories, hosted in 2009 at North Carolina State University, which examined research on learning trajectories. An overarching message of the chapters in this volume is that learning trajectories, by focusing on how children’s mathematical reasoning develops, are coming into their own as a rigorous underpinning for both instruction and accountability. Some of the learning scientists featured in this volume have played major roles learning trajectories’ evolution--from small-scale day-to-day conjectures by individual teachers, to systematic research endeavors that teachers and scientists alike can use to interpret standards, plan instruction, and formatively assess student work. The work in this volume will be of interest to mathematics educators, teachers, and professional development specialists.

Preface vii
Richard A. Duschl
Introduction: Learning Trajectories in Mathematics xi
Jere Confrey Alan P. Maloney
Kenny H. Nguyen
1 Learning Trajectories: Foundations for Effective, Research-based Education
1(30)
Douglas H. Clements
Julie Sarama
2 Toward Establishing a Learning Progression to Support the Development of Statistical Reasoning
31(30)
Richard Lehrer Min-Joung Kim Elizabeth Ayers
Mark Wilson
3 Equipartitioning, a Foundation for Rational Number Reasoning: Elucidation of a Learning Trajectory
61(36)
Jere Confrey
Alan P. Maloney
Kenny H. Nguyen
Andre A. Rupp
4 Two Approaches to Describing the Development of Students' Reasoning About Length: A Case Study for Coordinating Related Trajectories
97(28)
Jeffrey E. Barrett
Michael T. Battista
5 Linking Standards and Learning Trajectories: Boundary Objects and Representations
125(36)
Jere Confrey
Alan Maloney
6 Exploring the Relationship Between Learning Trajectories and Curriculum: A Content Analysis of Rational Number Reasoning in Connected Mathematics and UCSMP Transition Mathematics
161(26)
Kenny Huy Nguyen
Jere Confrey
7 Articulated Learning Trajectories: A Framework for Mathematical Content Analyses
187(40)
Travis A. Olson
8 Learning Trajectories and Professional Development
227(16)
P. Holt Wilson
Conclusion: Learning Trajectories Going Forward: A Foundation for Coherence in the Instructional Core 243(14)
Jere Confrey
Alan P. Maloney
Kenny H. Nguyen
Author Biographies 257
Alan P. Maloney, North Carolina State University, USA

Jere Confrey, North Carolina State University, USA

Kenny H. Nguyen, Catlin Gabel School, USA