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Special Education Teacher Preparation

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Inclusive Education, Intensive, Personalized Education, and Mathematics Instruction * * Pick one: I like mathematics I love mathematics I can live with it or without ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Special Education Teacher Preparation


1
Special Education Teacher Preparation
  • Inclusive Education, Intensive, Personalized
    Education, and Mathematics Instruction

2
Quick survey
  • Pick one
  • I like mathematics
  • I love mathematics
  • I can live with it or without it
  • I try to avoid mathematics

3
Special Educators CCSS
  • What do special educators need to know in the
    context of
  • Common Core State Standards Inclusive Education?

4
An Attempt at an Answer
  1. Goals of the Common Core in Mathematics
  2. FRACTIONS (teacher understanding and proficiency
    must precede improved instruction)
  3. Other aspects of algebra readiness
  4. Research base on effective instruction (and the
    gaping holes)
  5. RtI in mathematics strengths and vulnerabilities

5
Goals intent of Common Core in Mathematics (in
a nutshell)
  • Focus on fewer Mathematical Ideas and Procedures
    in depth
  • Why? To ensure understanding as well as
    proficiency fluency
  • Why? Understanding of arithmetic is key to
    success in algebra more advanced mathematics
  • Why? In part mathematics proficiency involves
    higher levels of abstraction abstracting out
  • Why else more depth time on each topic? Mastery
    proficiency criticalendless spiraling not good

6
Goals intent of Common Core in Mathematics
(cont.)
  • Capitalize on insight from cognitive research
    (Rittle-Johnson Siegler, 2001) and working
    knowledge of mathematicians
  • Conceptual procedural knowledge develop in a
    reciprocal fashion
  • Problem solving must be integrated into the mix
    as it enriches both (provides meaning to the
    computational procedural work, provides a logic
    for why things are done)

7
Goals intent of Common Core in Mathematics
(cont.)
  • Coherence
  • Includes demonstrating connections between the
    various ideas in geometry arithmetic/algebra
    between arithmetic algebra
  • Involves allowing students to solve problems, at
    times, in a variety of ways
  • Precision of mathematical language

8
Key Issue
  • Special education students must work on all these
    fronts. Older belief that practice on computation
    is the only means to teach does not address
    Common Core standards and will be increasingly
    frowned on.

9
Fractions
  • Many American teachers do not know much about
    fractions (Ball, 1990 Ma, 1999)
  • Many teachers struggle with both solving fraction
    problems explaining, for example, what division
    of a fraction is

10
Fractions (cont.)
  • Many teachers do not have automatic access to
    various common interpretations of fractions
  • Part of whole
  • Parts of a whole (e.g. 7/3)
  • Parts of a set
  • A specific point on a number line (measurement
    implications)
  • Equivalent to division

11
Sense of Betrayal
  • Students learn fractions as part of a whole in
    grade 3. Example
  • Half of the class went to museum the first day.
    There are 18 students in the class. How many
    went?
  • Put 9/4 on a number line

12
Teaching fractions
  • To teach fractions well, teachers must understand
    the mathematics
  • Special education students often are unlikely to
    intuit all the interpretations nuances

13
Minimum fraction Knowledge for special educators
  • At a minimum, special educators should know the
    interpretations of fractions
  • part(s) of units such as circles, pizzas,
    buildings
  • parts of a set
  • equivalent to division
  • a point on a number line determined by numerator
    denominator
  • Achievable objectives through PD work with
    mathematics educators or texts

14
Algebra readiness critical foundations
  • Properties of Arithmetic Multiplication
  • Commutative
  • Associative Property
  • Distributive Property
  • Fractions
  • It is beginning of road to abstraction. Example
    one number but looks like two numbers (e.g. 4/7)
  • Word Problems (path to abstraction)
  • Fact Fluency (to be able to understand
    mathematics)

15
What else about algebra readiness?
  • Gateway coursetrue for both algebra 1 2
  • Both require a full year of successful navigation
    of abstractions
  • Universal graduation requirement high failure
    rates

16
Overview of relevant research for mathematics
intervention sources
  • Gersten, R., Beckman, S., Clarke, B., Foegen, A.,
    Marsh, L., Star, J. R., Witzel, B., Dimino, J.,
    Jayanthi, M., Newman-Gonchar, R., Monahan, S.,
    Scott, L. (2009). Assisting students struggling
    with Mathematics Response to intervention
    (RtI) for elementary and middle schools (NCEE
    2009-4060). Washington, DC National Center for
    Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance,
    Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department
    of Education.
  • Gersten, R., Chard, D. J., Jayanthi, M., Baker,
    S. K., Morphy, P., Flojo, J. (2009).
    Mathematics Instruction for Students with
    Learning Disabilities A Meta-Analysis of
    Instructional Components. Review of Educational
    Research, 79, 1202-1242.
  • Also see Center on Instruction website at
    http//www.centeroninstruction.org/
  • Or google Center on Instruction, look for
    mathematics
  • (Note may be removed Sept. 30, 2012)

17
IES Practice Guide
18
Levels of evidence
19
(No Transcript)
20
Major Challenges of rti in mathematics
  • Must include foundational skills relevant to
    grade level content
  • e.g. division for fractions, fractions for
  • simple linear equations
  • Common Core Progressions are excellent source
  • http//ime.math.arizona.edu/progressions/
  • Interventions must include activities that cover
    mathematical ideas but use some of the empirical
    base on effective instruction for at- risk
    learners

21
Rti in mathematics a few contemporary issues
  • Screening measures strongest in K 1
  • In my view, grades 3 up need rethinking for
    both screening progress monitoring

22
why?
  • Do they measure what Common Core sets as
    proficiency (understanding, problem solving,
    representation modeling of mathematical ideas)?
  • What do grades 4 to 8 screening measures add
    above beyond prior years state assessment? Key
    question to ask

23
Why?
  • Will interventionists teach to the test?
  • i.e. if progress monitoring measures focus
    heavily on easy to score items (computations,
    easy problems) will this determine content of
    intervention?
  • Given technology advances with item response
    theory, can progress monitoring provide
    diagnostic information placement information?

24
Thank you
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