Using Japanese Curriculum Materials to Support Lesson Study Outside Japan : toward Coherent Curriculum

Lesson study (jugyou kenkyuu) has spread outside Japan in the last decade, providing opportunities to see how lesson study fares in countries where the instructional practices and curriculum materials differ from those in Japan. This study reports an elementary mathematics lesson study cycle from th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Educational Studies in Japan 2011, Vol.6, pp.5-19
Hauptverfasser: LEWIS, Catherine C., PERRY, Rebecca R., FRIEDKIN, Shelley
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PERRY, Rebecca R.
FRIEDKIN, Shelley
description Lesson study (jugyou kenkyuu) has spread outside Japan in the last decade, providing opportunities to see how lesson study fares in countries where the instructional practices and curriculum materials differ from those in Japan. This study reports an elementary mathematics lesson study cycle from the United States. To investigate the nature of the support for teachers' learning during the curriculum study ("kyouzai kenkyuu") phase of lesson study, we first compared a US. and Japanese teacher's manual in their treatment of area of quadrilaterals. The coding scheme captured features hypothesized to influence teachers' learning from curriculum including information on student thinking, learning trajectory and rationale for pedagogical decisions (Ball & Cohen, 1996). While the US. teacher's manual provided more correct student answers and more often suggested adaptations for particular categories of students (e.g., English-language learners), the Japanese manual provided more varied individual student responses and more rationale for pedagogical choices. We provided the Japanese curriculum and teacher's c manual to a US. lesson group and observed them during lesson study; US. teachers found some Japanese curriculum features useful (e.g., student thinking) and other features challenging (e.g., focus on a single problem). A comparison of the US. teachers' pre-and post-lesson study cycle lesson plans suggested that the teachers more thoroughly anticipated student thinking after working with the Japanese textbooks and teacher's manuals. We suggest that kyouzai kenkyuu on a well-designed teacher's manual may enable "coherent curriculum" at the policy level to be enacted in the classroom.
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subjects Comparative Analysis
Elementary School Mathematics
Elementary School Teachers
Foreign Countries
Japan
Teacher Collaboration
Teacher Improvement
Teaching Guides
United States
title Using Japanese Curriculum Materials to Support Lesson Study Outside Japan : toward Coherent Curriculum
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