Type | Thesis or Dissertation - Doctor of Education |
Title | What's professional development got to do with it? The value of lesson study in implementing the common core standards for mathematical practices |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2015 |
Abstract | Over the past several decades, the U.S. educational system has undergone many reform efforts that have failed to ensure equal access to knowledge, skills, and abilities necessary for all students to succeed (Schmidt & Burroughs, 2013). Many critics of public education have placed the blame of educational failures on the teachers who work in the schools and classrooms. In 1996, the National Commission of Teaching and America’s Future (1996) stated: What teachers know and can do makes the crucial difference in what teachers can accomplish. New courses, tests, and curriculum reforms can be important starting points, but they are meaningless if teachers cannot use them productively. Policies can improve schools only if the people in them are armed with the knowledge, skills, and supports they need (p. 5). In response to the “changing world economic order” (Medrich & Griffith, 1992, p. vii) President George H. W. Bush and the Nation’s Governors developed a specific goal for mathematics and science, the two subject areas “critical to successful competition among highly technological societies” (Medrich & Griffith, 1992, p. vii). The goal was for U.S. students to be “first in the world in science and mathematics achievement by the year 2000” (Medrich & Griffith, 1992, p. vii). This achievement would be measured by international assessments of student achievement in mathematics and science. Two long-term trend assessments, the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) and the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), have been used to measure changes in student achievement for students in elementary, middle, and high school in content areas such as mathematics, science, and reading. |
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