19 research outputs found
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Applications in the Secondary School Mathematics Curriculum: A Generation of Change
In the 1960s, the ideal curriculum, as seen from recommendations in journals and reports, and the implemented curriculum, as viewed from textbooks, referred very little to applications of mathematics outside the subject. Yet today the teaching of real-world applications of mathematics is seen as a necessary component of a good mathematics education. A number of factors are responsible for this change: changing enrollment trends; changing theories toward how students learn and what they can learn; the arrivals of computers and calculators in schools; the public perception of performance of students on standardized tests; and recommendations of business and industry regarding what they would like to see in the people they hire. The change is manifested in various ways beyond the inclusion of problems that relate mathematics to the world outside the classroom. The most widely used of the newer curricula develops important application ideas from basic principles over many years. Newer influences on the thinking of mathematics educators come from advances in applied mathematics that have resulted in major changes in the workplace and a corresponding desire that no students be excluded from significant applied mathematics. As a result, some of the more recent curricula include entire courses based on units, each with a particular application theme, with the expectation that students will work both individually and in groups
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Reforming the Third R: Changing the School Mathematics Curriculum: An Introduction
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The Effects Of Teaching Euclidean Geometry Via Transformations On Studentachievement And Attitudes In Tenth-grade Geometry.
PhDEducationUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/179951/2/7014670.pd
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Geometry Proof Writing: A New View of Sex Differences in Mathematics Ability
A study of 1,364 students in 74 senior high school classes in which geometry proof was taught found equal ability among males and females to write geometry proofs. These results held as well for select high-achieving subsamples. These findings and data from other recent studies suggest that girls and boys perform equally well even on complex mathematical tasks if both in-class and out-of-class exposure to the tasks is equal