cover of The Impact of Reform Instruction on Student Mathematics Achievement: An Example of a Summative Evaluation of a Standards-Based Curriculum

The Impact of Reform Instruction on Student Mathematics Achievement

An Example of a Summative Evaluation of a Standards-Based Curriculum

By Thomas Romberg, Mary C. Shafer

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About the Book

Summarizing data derived from a four-year combined longitudinal/ cross-sectional comparative study of the implementation of one standards-based middle school curriculum program, Mathematics in Context, this book demonstrates the challenges of conducting comparative longitudinal research in the reality of school life.

The study was designed to answer three questions:

The researchers examined a range of variables that affected data collection. These variations highlight the need to study the effects of the culture in which student learning is situated when analyzing the impact of standards-based curricula on student achievement.

This book is directed to educational researchers interested in curriculum implementation, mathematics educators interested in the effects of using reform curriculum materials in classrooms, evaluators and research methodologists interested in structural modeling and scaling of instructional variables, and educational policy makers concerned about reform efforts.

Table of Contents

@contents: Selected Contents:

Preface

Chapter 1. Proposing to Study Standards-Based Curriculum Implementation

Chapter 2. Setting the Foundation: Initiation of the Study

Chapter 3. Building a Culture of Support for Reform: Implementation of

Professional Development

Chapter 4. Examining the Role of Teachers: Background, Instruction, and

Treatment Fidelity

Chapter 5. Linking Instruction and Student Opportunity to Learn with

Understanding

Chapter 6. Looking at Assessment Instruments

Chapter 7. Findings about Student Achievement, Question 1: What is the

Impact of the MiC Instructional Approach on Student

Achievement?

Chapter 8. Findings about Student Achievement, Question 2: How is the

Impact of Instruction Using MiC Different from That of

Conventional Instruction on Student Performance?

Chapter 9. Findings about Student Achievement, Question 3: What Variables

Associated with Classroom Instruction Account for Variation in

Student Performance?

Chapter 10. A Closing Note: What We Learned from the Research

References

About the Author(s)

Thomas A. Romberg is Bascom Professor of Education and Professor Emeritus in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Mary C. Shafer is Associate Professor of Mathematics Education in the Department of Mathematical Sciences at Northern Illinois University.