Problem-Solving Strategies as a Measure of Longitudinal Curricular Effects on Student Learning

This study examined the longitudinal effects of a middle school reform mathematics curriculum on students' open-ended problem solving in high school. Using assessment data from a large, longitudinal project, we compared the open-ended problem-solving performance and strategy use of high school...

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Veröffentlicht in:North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education 2014
Hauptverfasser: Cai, Jinfa, Silber, Steven, Hwang, Stephen, Nie, Bikai, Moyer, John C, Wang, Ning
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container_title North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education
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creator Cai, Jinfa
Silber, Steven
Hwang, Stephen
Nie, Bikai
Moyer, John C
Wang, Ning
description This study examined the longitudinal effects of a middle school reform mathematics curriculum on students' open-ended problem solving in high school. Using assessment data from a large, longitudinal project, we compared the open-ended problem-solving performance and strategy use of high school students who had used the Connected Mathematics Program (CMP) in middle school with that of students who had used more traditional mathematics curricula. When controlling for sixth-grade state mathematics test performance, high school students who had used CMP in middle school had significantly higher scores on a multipart open-ended problem. In addition, high school students who had used CMP appeared to have greater success algebraically abstracting the relationship in the task. [For the complete proceedings, see ED597799.]
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subjects Algebra
Educational Change
High School Students
Logical Thinking
Longitudinal Studies
Mathematics Achievement
Mathematics Curriculum
Mathematics Skills
Mathematics Tests
Middle School Mathematics
Middle School Students
Multiple Choice Tests
Outcomes of Education
Problem Based Learning
Problem Solving
Retention (Psychology)
title Problem-Solving Strategies as a Measure of Longitudinal Curricular Effects on Student Learning
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