The mathematics curriculum is influenced by digital technology in delivery and practice. This volume, from a 2014 University of Chicago conference, explores changes in curricular materials, student learning, and teacher roles. Experts discuss how technology impacts math education, challenging traditional paper-and-pencil methods.
The mathematics curriculum – what mathematics is taught, to whom it is taught, and when it is taught – is the bedrock to understanding what mathematics students can, could, and should learn. Today’s digital technology influences the mathematics curriculum in two quite different ways. One influence is on the delivery of mathematics through hardware such as desktops, laptops, and tablets. Another influence is on the doing of mathematics using software available on this hardware, but also available on the internet, calculators, or smart phones.These developments, rapidly increasing in their availability and decreasing in their cost, raise fundamental questions regarding a mathematics curriculum that has traditionally been focused on paper-and-pencil work and taught in many places as a set of rules to be practiced and learned.This volume presents the talks given at a conference held in 2014 at the University of Chicago, sponsored by the Center for the Study of Mathematics Curriculum. The speakers – experts from around the world and inside the USA – were asked to discuss one or more of the following topics:• changes in the nature and creation of curricular materials available to students• transformations in how students learn and how they demonstrate their learning• rethinking the role of the teacher and how students and teachers interact within a classroom and across distances from each otherThe result is a set of articles that are interesting and captivating, and challenge us to examine how the learning of mathematics can and should be affected by today’s technology.
Preface |
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Acknowledgments |
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1 | (6) |
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PART I CREATING DIGITAL CURRICULUM |
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2 Designing Curriculum for Digital Middle Grades Mathematics: Personalized Learning Ecologies |
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7 | (28) |
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3 Developing and Implementing "Smart" Mathematics Textbooks in Korea: Issues and Challenges |
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35 | (18) |
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4 Technology-Enhanced Teaching/Learning at a New Level With Dynamic Mathematics as Implemented in the New Cabri |
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53 | (22) |
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5 The Re-Sourcing Movement in Mathematics Teaching: Some European Initiatives |
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75 | (12) |
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6 Inquiry Curriculum and E-Textbooks: Technological Changes That Challenge the Representation of Mathematics Pedagogy |
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87 | (22) |
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PART II IMPLEMENTING DIGITAL CURRICULUM |
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7 Connections and Distinctions Among Today's Digital Innovations and Yesterday's Innovative Curricula |
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109 | (14) |
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8 Technology to Support Mathematics Instruction: Examples From the Real World |
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123 | (10) |
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9 We Thought We Knew It All |
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133 | (6) |
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10 Deeply Digital Curriculum for Deeply Digital Students |
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139 | (22) |
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PART III RESEARCHING DIGITAL CURRICULUM |
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11 Analysis of Eight Digital Curriculum Programs |
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161 | (16) |
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12 A Design Experiment of a Deeply Digital Instructional Unit and Its Impact in High School Classrooms |
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177 | (18) |
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13 Keeping an Eye on the Teacher in the Digital Curriculum Race |
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195 | (10) |
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14 New Starting Points for Number Sense Using TouchCounts |
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205 | (20) |
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PART IV BROADER CONSIDERATIONS ABOUT DIGITAL CURRICULUM |
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15 Digitally Enhanced Learning |
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225 | (14) |
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16 Mathematics Standards and Curricula Under the Influence of Digital Affordances: Different Notions, Meanings, and Roles in Different Parts of the World |
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239 | (12) |
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17 Mathematics Curriculum, Assessment, and Teaching for Living in the Digital World: Computational Tools in High Stakes Assessment |
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251 | (20) |
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18 Mathematics Education is at a Major Turning Point |
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271 | (14) |
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19 Deeply Digital STEM Learning |
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285 | (12) |
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297 | (6) |
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Appendix A Conference Program |
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303 | (6) |
Appendix B Speaker Biographies |
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309 | (8) |
Appendix C Conference Personnel |
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Meg Bates, The University of Chicago, USA
Zalman Usiskin, The University of Chicago, USA
Denisse R Thompson, University of South Florida, USA
Mary Ann Huntley, Cornell University, USA.
Christine Suurtamm, University of Ottawa, USA.