Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Why I believe supplementing the Investigations curriculum would be an ineffective and frustrating strategy to improve math education in CPS

by Tere DeWitt

A well written mathematics textbook is a thing of beauty to the math teacher. It has many layers and nuances that might not be obvious to the casual observer. The components that make up a good lesson will include practice over the new concept, applying the new concept in application problems, an opportunity to be challenged with the new concept by more difficult practice and/or applications, review of previously learned topics to reinforce their learning, and perhaps foreshadowing, to borrow a literary term, or pre-requisite practice of the topic to be learned tomorrow. Truly good texts can layer 2 or more of these components into a single question. They give the teachers, who know their classes better than anyone, flexibility to choose the appropriate content to best further the education of their students. They also allow for different learning styles and provide a variety of means for the teacher to use to communicate the content, so no student is left out of the learning process all the time. This takes a lot of planning and editing and doesn’t just happen by accident.

Now, we are getting some of the school board candidates to speak out for the teaching of mastery of basic math facts and standards in our elementary schools. They have said that they think Investigations should be supplemented.

The Investigations curriculum is not designed to support mastery of basic arithmetic facts. It is designed to support their discovery methods and also the use of calculators. Therefore, the problems in the curriculum would be worthless for the teaching of basic math facts and could actually have a detrimental effect on the learning of basic facts by not being designed to reinforce them and to increase in difficulty as the student progresses.

One of the reasons the traditional algorithms have been used for thousands of years is that they are efficient, with fewer steps than other methods, and therefore have fewer places that an error could occur. If a student learns one of these algorithms and sees its efficient result, they will be very resistant to another, longer and perhaps more tedious method to solve a problem. Likewise, the Investigations curriculum, which is very calculator dependent, will encourage students not to learn the traditional algorithms because the calculator is more efficient than the algorithms and the algorithms become the tedious method. I would not want to be a teacher in this classroom fighting this battle day in and day out.

The Investigations curriculum does not build on previously learned knowledge. Their teachers’ resources say that the units may be taught in any order. We are missing the vital components of review and also of taking concepts to greater depths. They are a one size fits all package without allowing for the difference in learning styles. As a math teacher, I know that there is a lot of math out there to learn. I never get all the information covered in my classes that I want to. To devote six weeks for “discovering” a topic takes time away from developing any depth about that topic and then, to never revisit that topic during the school year, means that for many students that topic is all but forgotten. This is not good pedagogy and we can’t waste that precious time.

For these reasons above, I have come to the conclusion that Investigations is such a weak curriculum, we should replace it as soon as possible. We will have to phase in a new curriculum, because our students will be behind, so even more precious educational time is going to be lost. Investigations has done some good, in that the traditional textbook authors have responded to their methods and the “drill and kill” books are a thing of the past. The new blended texts, as some websites are calling them, include all the components I have listed above and also include discovery learning opportunities, writing to explain math, critical thinking exercises, and non-routine problem solving. Let’s encourage our curriculum review committee to look these resources over and see if we can’t come up with one strong mathematics curriculum. A curriculum that contains a variety of methods to best help the diverse student population of Columbia to learn math to the best of each individual student’s ability.


Tere DeWitt is a math tutor and member of the CPR-Math steering committee. Her opinions are her own, and we welcome discussion of the issues she raises.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Boy do I agree with you on that. Now that I'm afterschooling my kids using Saxon, I see how carefully a math text must be contructed for proper building of one idea on another.

I blog extensively about afterschooling three of my kids and have been doing so for thirteen months.

But I keep getting hit in new ways regarding just how bad the reform math is. Yes, you can take a good teacher, give her a bad text, and turn her into a bad teacher. So sad.

Linda Moran

Barry Garelick said...

I'm glad to hear there is so much protest to Investigations. I do, however, tend to react to statements such as "and the “drill and kill” books are a thing of the past". I don't think providing problems to get students to master skills and procedures is a bad thing. Too much can be bad, yes, but how are we defining that? When I see the phrase "drill and kill" it makes it sound that any type of repetitive practice is a bad thing, and it is not.

I enjoy this site, and support all of you in your battle against terrible math programs.