From the Written to the Enacted Curricula: The Intermediary Role of Middle School Mathematics Teachers in Shaping Students' Opportunity to Learn

In this paper is reported the extent of textbook use by 39 middle school mathematics teachers in six states, 17 utilizing a textbook series developed with funding from the National Science Foundation (NSF‐funded) and 22 using textbooks developed by commercial publishers (publisher‐generated). Result...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:School science and mathematics Vol. 106; no. 4; pp. 191 - 201
Main Authors: Tarr, James E., Chávez, Óscar, Reys, Robert E., Reys, Barbara J.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01-04-2006
School Science and Mathematics Association
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Summary:In this paper is reported the extent of textbook use by 39 middle school mathematics teachers in six states, 17 utilizing a textbook series developed with funding from the National Science Foundation (NSF‐funded) and 22 using textbooks developed by commercial publishers (publisher‐generated). Results indicate that both sets of teachers placed significantly higher emphasis on Number and Operation, often at the expense of other content strands. Location of topics within a textbook represented an oversimplified explanation of what mathematics gets taught or omitted. Most teachers using an NSF‐funded curriculum taught content intended for students in a different (lower) grade, and both sets of teachers supplemented with skill‐building and “practice” worksheets. Implications for documenting teachers' “fidelity of implementation” (National Research Council, 2004) are offered.
Bibliography:istex:3D6EF77DDCD0B1EBA8319FBBCFB04568BC6C190A
ArticleID:SSM18075
ark:/67375/WNG-DXZLSGZD-4
This study and the development of this paper were made possible with support from the United States Department of Education (Grant number R303T010735) and the Center for the Study of Mathematics Curriculum (NSF Award No. ESI‐0333879). The views and conclusions expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the United States Department of Education or the National Science Foundation.
ISSN:0036-6803
1949-8594
DOI:10.1111/j.1949-8594.2006.tb18075.x