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The State Board of Education is poised to approve a nearly 1,000-page guidance for math instruction this week with the ambitious, much-contested goal of transforming how math is taught in California, where only a third of students — and 1 in 5 low-income students — met standards in the latest state standardized test.
With the adoption of new textbooks, it may take years of intensive teacher training on a magnitude the state has not funded in decades before it becomes clear whether the revised Mathematics Framework for California Public Schools will move the needle of student engagement and achievement. Many teachers are confident it will, but there are skeptics.
The revised framework is nearly four years in the making. The third and likely last version, in response to more than 900 comments and petitions pro and con, took 14 months to complete. The California Department of Education oversaw the revision; it reflected changes recommended by the Region 15 Comprehensive Center of WestEd, the San Francisco-based research and service organization, which reviewed and analyzed the earlier public comments.
The state board released the new draft on June 26; it accepted comments only through noon on July 7. After a final hearing scheduled for Wednesday, the board is expected to pass it, perhaps with minor changes.
Among those who will urge the board to adopt the final draft is Kyndall Brown, a former high school math teacher who is the executive director of the state-funded California Mathematics Project Statewide Office. Saying he was pleased that the “spirit” of the framework remains intact, Brown added, “This is the most equity-focused math framework I have ever seen as an educator in California.”
“The biggest and strongest part of this framework are the chapters on teaching and structuring school experiences for equity and engagement,” he said. “The math ed community, the people I interact with on a regular basis, support the framework, and we are ready to move forward and get this implemented.”
The framework’s recommendations are voluntary, but they heavily influence districts’ and teachers’ decisions and serve as guidelines for textbook publishers. The first two drafts have stirred national interest, in part because California, with 5.8 million students, is the nation’s largest and most lucrative market for textbook publishers, who, the framework’s authors make clear (see Chapter 13), will have to hew to its guidelines to make the list of approved publishers.
But the proposed framework also adds another twist in the decades long debate over math instruction. Math traditionalists are warning that a proposed student-centered, inquiry-based, “big-ideas” driven instructional strategy, which de-emphasizes memorization and attention to procedures, will fail most students.
Thousands of university STEM professionals signed petitions criticizing a proposed high school pathway that appeared to favor data science over the traditional course sequence to calculus, which is required for college students majoring in science, technology, engineering and math. Parents of students with advanced math skills and 6,000 others who signed a related petition were angry that the framework discouraged districts from starting algebra in eighth grade. The early start would give students a leg up on fitting in calculus before high school graduation.
In response, the new writers did eliminate the call for a new data science pathway; instead, they wove data skills into math instruction throughout grade spans. They also made some effort to clear up confusion conflating courses in data literacy, which all 21st-century students need, with a more rigorous, math-intensive data science course that, together with calculus, would prepare students for a data science major in college.
What the framework didn’t discuss, however, is a related controversy roiling the University of California and California State University faculties over whether a growing list of UC-authorized data science courses, with minimal advanced math content, will leave students unprepared for math-intensive courses in college.
Last week, a committee of the UC faculty senate, called BOARS, which oversees high school course qualifications, publicly acknowledged it is having second thoughts on the approved courses. In a July 7 letter to the state board, the chair of BOARS asked that the revised framework delete references in the text and in a diagram (see below) indicating that data science courses can substitute as a math requirement for Algebra II. The letter indicated that BOARS planned to look into the issue further.

Source: June 26, 2023 revision of the California Mathematics Framework, page 30, Chapter 8.
BOARS, the UC faculty committee overseeing the criteria for high school courses meeting the A-G requirements for admission to the University of California and California State University, is asking that the State Board of Education delete Data Science I and II from the circle indicating the current high school data science courses that can be substituted for Algebra II.
The writers of the latest revision rephrased or removed some citations of works in the prior version, on neuroscience and other topics. Some of the citations of work support the instructional methods promoted by math instruction experts, including Stanford University math education professor Jo Boaler, one of the original framework’s team of authors.
At least some critics who had hoped that a year of work would fix the numerous problems they raised remain dissatisfied. The most prolific, if not most influential of them, Brian Conrad, professor of mathematics and director of undergraduate studies in math at Stanford, once again called for rejection of the framework due to shortcomings he cited.
In a nine-page update of his dissertation-length critique from a year ago, he pointed to remaining citation misrepresentations, and inconsistencies that could lead to contradictory interpretations of the framework and data science issues. “Critical concerns remain, and the (framework) does not live up to the standards of a document that sets state-wide education policy,” he wrote in a public comment last week.
Most of the past year’s effort went into clarifying, shortening and reorganizing the massive document. The focus of rewriting was on a half-dozen chapters, including the first two, laying out how to develop positive mindsets about math, like the belief that all students can succeed in math, and use students’ diverse backgrounds as “cultural assets.” Vignettes useful for teachers that lengthened chapters were moved to an appendix.
Most significantly, the new draft didn’t retreat from its primary charge to make math engaging and relevant for the many students who, particularly once they hit middle school, see math as abstract and inaccessible. That was the guidance of focus groups of teachers, an advisory group of California educators called the Curriculum Framework and Evaluation Criteria Committee, and the state board.
Using “open, engaging tasks” and “inviting student questions and conjectures” will be among the classroom strategies the framework cites as ways to meet the needs of diverse students; another is to “teach toward social justice,” such as creating graphs of student homelessness or doing data analysis of air and ground pollutants by neighborhood.
“Teaching towards social justice is really about using activities and discussions that really highlight some of the inequities in the world,” Boaler said during a June 29 webinar with writers of the original draft following the release of the new draft.
The earlier writers weren’t involved in the latest rewrite, but, during the webinar, they generally praised the result. Brian Lindaman, co-faculty director of the Center for Science and Mathematics Instruction at Chico State, and the lead of five authors of the earlier framework, said that based on the chapters he had read, “I have liked and appreciated the changes by and large,” including improvements in “the readability, the flow, the coherence of it.”
The revised framework also didn’t back off the previous recommendation that nearly all students shouldn’t take Algebra I until ninth grade. It does acknowledge that “some students will be ready to accelerate” into Algebra I in eighth grade, affording them greater access to advanced courses in high school. But those students should be assessed for algebra readiness, and schools should consider offering them summer courses, like Bob Moses’ Algebra Project, which has successfully prepared underrepresented students for algebra, the framework states.
Districts have the authority to decide which students can take algebra in eighth grade; a 2015 state law, the Math Placement Act, requires districts to adopt objective criteria for placing students in math courses, and consistently apply their policies. But many districts will take their lead from the state.
To discourage widespread enrollment in eighth-grade algebra, the framework’s diagram laying out STEM and non-STEM course pathways omits eighth-grade algebra as an option. To justify its position, the framework cites California’s experience in the early 2000s, when the state pressured districts to offer eighth-grade algebra; studies showed many students were unprepared and ended up repeating the course, with no better outcome. “Success for many students was undermined,” the framework said.
But Conrad counters that the more recent experience in San Francisco Unified, forcing all students to learn algebra in ninth grade, “was a total failure, exacerbating the very inequities it aimed to prevent, and is especially misguided since this country faces a dire shortage of STEM professionals.”
A “common ninth-grade experience” in math also is a strategy to prevent tracking, the practice of identifying potentially advanced math students as early as elementary school. That can have the effect of stunting the self-image, aspirations and abilities of non-tracked students. These students, predominantly low-income Black and Hispanic children, tend to end up with the least inspiring curriculums and least experienced teachers, Brown said. The harmful effects of tracking, he said, are real.
“If we can wait to hold the tracking off until at least eighth grade, we’ve given more kids opportunities to stay on the pathway to get high-level math classes,” said Cole Sampson, a member of the education advisory group to the framework and administrator of professional learning and student support for the Kern County superintendent’s office.
But placing algebra-ready students into a heterogeneous classroom of students with a wide range of skills can compound the challenges for teachers. It also denies eighth graders ready for algebra a jump-start to high-school math. To get to calculus, they must now double up math courses, enroll in a summer course or take a challenging compression math course, with supplemental help if they’re lucky. For low-income students holding down jobs, the obstacles hindering acceleration can force them to abandon plans for a STEM concentration in college.
As an alternative to eighth-grade algebra, the framework recommends that a task force investigate whether eliminating redundancies in the content of current courses could reduce four courses – Algebra I, Geometry, Algebra II and Precalculus – to three and reach advanced math like calculus by senior year.
Brown is confident this could be done. Conrad is skeptical, noting the framework drafters have had three years to come up with an alternative and haven’t. CSU Northridge Mathematics Professor Katherine Stevenson, who co-chaired the CSU Quantitative Reasoning Task Force, finds herself in between: It won’t be possible to pare down a course sequence without first looking at the 2013 Common Core math standards through the lens of what standards students will need in 2030, and then redesign a course sequence based on those standards.
Most students don’t major in STEM in college or take calculus. The biggest challenge to high school math is to design courses that will enable students to “exercise choice about their futures” by, the framework says, providing them “more opportunities to make choices that reflect their interests and aspirations.”
School districts have considerable latitude to design third- and fourth-year courses, and the framework cites Financial Algebra, comparable in rigor to Algebra II, where students do mathematical modeling related to personal finance. Another is Transition to College Math and Statistics, which Stevenson designed in partnership with Los Angeles Unified. It provides math practices, like reading and interpreting data from two-way frequency tables and bar graphs, for high school seniors uncertain of their plans for college.
The goal should be flexibility, keeping students’ options open. The framework cites examples of students’ journeys: A student who plans to major in non-STEM graphics arts discovers an interest in software applications, so she takes Pre-calculus as a senior with a support class, setting herself up for freshman calculus and programming classes. After the standard first two years of math, another student who plans to work in a fabrication shop after graduation takes a course in modeling to understand the math of three-dimensional printing.
High school sequences have drawn the most contention, but it’s the underlying instructional strategies that could create the framework’s biggest impact. The approach, which academics call constructivism, underlies the math standards that were adopted in California in the early 1990s, then abandoned after a grassroots revolt in 1997. While the changes wouldn’t be new, they could be drastic, fundamentally turning classroom instruction on its head.
The framework defines the difference in contrasting the beliefs in “unproductive” and “productive” roles of teachers.
The former, found in many classrooms, is “to tell students exactly what definitions, formulas, and rules they should know and demonstrate how to use this information to solve mathematics problems. The role of the student is to memorize information that is presented and then use it to solve routine problems on homework, quizzes, and tests.”
The latter should be “to engage students in tasks that promote reasoning and problem-solving and facilitate discourse that moves students toward shared understanding of mathematics. The role of the student is to be actively involved in making sense of mathematics tasks by using varied strategies and representations, justifying solutions, making connections to prior knowledge or familiar contexts and experiences, and considering the reasoning of others.”
Math isn’t working for the majority of students, the framework says, because there’s no context or connection with what they learn from one day to the next or to the world around them. A year is divided into units of “power standards,” which are taught individually, demonstrated with a procedure, and then assessed, before moving on to the next one.
The alternative is to tap into students’ curiosity with the goal of building deep understanding of math ideas. Classes should start with student-based questions about math and explore from there. Teachers should anchor lessons to “big ideas” in each grade that connect clusters of standards within the topic, like number sense, and across domains to show how algebra relates to geometry. Big ideas in third grade include fractions as relationships and number flexibility to 100; in sixth grade, they include relationships between variables.
“The framework is saying that we really need to make sure that the conceptual precedes the procedure to provide the understanding, so that when we get to those steps later on, we understand the why behind it. It’s not a mystery any more,” said Sampson.
A teacher might start off this way, said Stevenson: “Here’s the situation: What do you notice and wonder about it? Here’s a bunch of things that we’re going to talk about today. Which ones do you already know?” Answers will lead to procedures needed to solve it, whether how to do two-digit multiplication or to calculate the volume of a cylinder.
“Just the idea of the big ideas is huge, so that teachers aren’t feeling they’re teaching things in isolation,” said Vicki Murray, a learning coordinator in Buellton Unified who has taught elementary grades math, agrees. “Jo Boaler has really done an amazing job showing the mile-high view, that this idea connects to all these different other pieces of math.” Buellton is a 600-student district north of Santa Barbara.
“A lot of K-6 teachers are super excited about it, and it makes sense to them,” Stevenson said. “It’s actually asking them to teach math the same way they teach a lot of other things,” like the Next Generation Science Standards. But high school teachers may feel disoriented with the approach and burdened by the complex set of rubrics around which teachers should design lessons.
“I support the idea that we need to teach differently. I do agree that what we’re doing right now is not working. We’re trying to teach too much too fast,” Stevenson said. “I wonder if there isn’t a simpler formulation of what they (the authors) are trying to get at.” At the end of a class, she said, students may walk away with a “muddy sense of what they were to have learned.”
Tom Loveless, an education researcher who now lives near Sacramento, a former senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and the author of a book on the Common Core standards, gave a harsh assessment of the framework’s philosophy. The authors, he said, created a “false dichotomy” about the need for “conceptual understanding before procedural fluency. Good teachers teach both.”
The math framework should be organized around the content of the Common Core standards, not around “rather fuzzy ideas about process,” he said.
He said he is sympathetic with the critics that math facts and procedures have been taught poorly. “But there will be a toll paid for pushing them in the background.”
“The previous framework was very clear that math fluency involves speed and accuracy. The proposed framework rejects speed as being even part of fluency, and that’s a problem,” he said.
Math facts learned and stored in long-term memory can be retrieved effortlessly when students take on more-complex cognitive tasks, he wrote in a recent article. Contrary to the requirements of the Common Core standards, the framework calls for pushing back fluency in multiplication and division tables until late elementary grades. The delay will carry forward, and he expects fewer students will be prepared for algebra in ninth grade.
That has been the experience of Jane Molnar, who has been teaching math for 43 years as a math specialist working in classrooms and as a tutor. “If you don’t master certain things in first grade, second grade, third grade and instead you’re just exploring and talking about numbers, kids just can’t keep up. And when the same thing continues through middle school, students who wouldn’t know how to divide with ease using the division algorithm would find trying to divide polynomials in algebra way too complicated.”
Advocates of the framework agree that intensive training will be critical and a heavy lift for teachers who lack strong content knowledge.
“There’s going to be some discomfort for sure at the front end for those who really have a very regimented routine about how math should be taught,” said Sampson.
Brown said his biggest hope is that the framework “will really influence the way that teachers think about teaching and engaging their students.” His biggest fear is that “the state will not really fully fund the rollout and provide teachers with the support they need to really implement it.”
Like Brown, the framework’s original authors said the payoff would be huge.
“One of the missions of this framework is to get rid of ways of thinking that only some students can do mathematics to high levels and open up this beautiful subject of mathematics for everyone,” said Boaler.
Ben Ford, a math professor at Sonoma State University, said, “If my students start arriving at university understanding mathematics as a set of lenses for exploring questions that they’re actually interested in, I would be ecstatic. And that is one of the goals of this framework.”
Loveless, however, predicts history will repeat itself.
Just as more parents now are demanding an end to whole-language instruction and adoption of reading curricula with basic literacy skills, parents seeing poor results in math will demand change in a few years, as they did in the ’90s, he said.
“Math facts are to math as phonics is to reading,” Loveless said.

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William 1 year ago1 year ago
This “new math” was introduced at my child’s high school. It was basically more reading and less math. The problem was it is no longer in depth that challenges students to think at a deeper level. It skims a lot of topics without much depth or work. Students need repetition in math to master executing mathematical principles. Luckily we were able to change schools where we got lots of homework and did well on the math AP tests.
Jimmy Le 2 years ago2 years ago
We have to directly address the uncomfortable question of the student demographics. CA has many immigrants who are the poorest of the poor from Mexico and other Latin America countries. These laborers are not involved or are unprepared to support their kids' education. Do we need to hold back other kids to allow children of poor immigrants to catch up? I am sure children of engineers and doctors from Mexico City would perform perfectly fine … Read More
We have to directly address the uncomfortable question of the student demographics. CA has many immigrants who are the poorest of the poor from Mexico and other Latin America countries.
These laborers are not involved or are unprepared to support their kids’ education. Do we need to hold back other kids to allow children of poor immigrants to catch up? I am sure children of engineers and doctors from Mexico City would perform perfectly fine in CA but they are not the ones that are crossing the borders.
David O'Shea 2 years ago2 years ago
Wow, completely unqualified educators driving incredibly disastrous policy with no basis in reality. It is the culmination of liberal dysfunction applied to math education. The totally misplaced "hope" that watering down math to be less "mathy" will make poor students more engaged and interested, but that this mental gymnastics lie will not harm every other student in the class. Poor, disinterested students cannot be "easily" fixed, period. (Some can be fixed, but … Read More
Wow, completely unqualified educators driving incredibly disastrous policy with no basis in reality. It is the culmination of liberal dysfunction applied to math education. The totally misplaced “hope” that watering down math to be less “mathy” will make poor students more engaged and interested, but that this mental gymnastics lie will not harm every other student in the class.
Poor, disinterested students cannot be “easily” fixed, period. (Some can be fixed, but not easily, not like this.) The hard truth is teaching the disinterested usually means first helping them find competence, the self-assuredness, then actual interest! This misguide approach “hopes” the opposite sequence will be a miracle cure…. “Make it easier, less “mathy””, “Make it Big Idea (no actual math)”, so these students will “see the value in math”, then “get interested in math”, then “perform in math.” It makes a nice soap-opera, but it is not real life. Not in any classroom, anywhere!!
Bad math students are bad for so many reasons. This approach might win 10% (maybe), at the cost of destroying the 70% that were already doing fine, and actually learning math. And most of those, don’t care about the “big ideas of math,” or have some innate desire an interest in data science’s “worth”. Not in high school. They are just better students, better monitored by the parents, better directed by their parents, more generally accepting of guidance from teachers of education as a value. Not in “math’s big picture worth”.
This idea is some completely baseless in fact and reality, a total sacrifice of all math education, in the state that needs it most (most tech companies needing high capability math students high school -> 4 year college -> graduate education math. All of those levels.
This not only should be shoved to the gutter, every person involved needs to be removed from positions of input, authority, suggestion, management, or even presence in the classroom. This is a disease now reaching its terminal stage, it needs to be cut out completely, like the cancer it is.
Paul Muench 2 years ago2 years ago
I will make a prediction...wait for it....on the whole nothing will change due to this curriculum as far as students' understanding of math. The world has changed a lot in the last few decades. So much information is easily accessible at our fingertips. You can instantaneously access a high quality tutorial on any math subject that you would like. I don't know of any school that is not encouraging use … Read More
I will make a prediction…wait for it….on the whole nothing will change due to this curriculum as far as students’ understanding of math. The world has changed a lot in the last few decades. So much information is easily accessible at our fingertips. You can instantaneously access a high quality tutorial on any math subject that you would like. I don’t know of any school that is not encouraging use of Khan Academy or similar instruction tool so that students can get immediate feedback. This is how students learn today.
I predict the biggest change due to this new curriculum is increased enrollment at accredited summer math programs. Unfortunately these programs are not accessible to poorer students. And getting rid of them would likely run afoul of the teachers’ union as it is a good source of extra income for public school teachers.
Trevor 2 years ago2 years ago
As someone who taught math for many years and today who uses ChatGPT4 daily to help with my computer programming, what I wonder is, how long will it take math (and other) educators to realize that the greatest technological advance in the history of education has just been dropped into their laps. That's what the debate should be about. How do we utilize this incredible new resource? Ruminating over what grade … Read More
As someone who taught math for many years and today who uses ChatGPT4 daily to help with my computer programming, what I wonder is, how long will it take math (and other) educators to realize that the greatest technological advance in the history of education has just been dropped into their laps. That’s what the debate should be about. How do we utilize this incredible new resource? Ruminating over what grade we should teach algebra or whether we should teach “data science” instead of calculus so misses the mark.
Jim 2 years ago2 years ago
The lesson here is simple.
Teaching students is too hard. Better to “close the gap” by preventing other students from learning.
“the people I interact with on a regular basis, support the framework” Sounds like someone needs to get out more.
Luis 2 years ago2 years ago
This will spiral kids even further. Ridiculous! Lets look at what countries with kids that outperform US have- ( Fundamentals, practice, rigor, respect, Math abled staff at all levels, etc). This is a gift to the status quo same as in the the Reading wars (Basal v Phonics) and look where CA is at now. On other note, Tony T just laid out where his contracting and campaign money will come form - Teacher unions … Read More
This will spiral kids even further. Ridiculous! Lets look at what countries with kids that outperform US have- ( Fundamentals, practice, rigor, respect, Math abled staff at all levels, etc). This is a gift to the status quo same as in the the Reading wars (Basal v Phonics) and look where CA is at now. On other note, Tony T just laid out where his contracting and campaign money will come form – Teacher unions + Publishers). Hate if you want, but watch!
Bruce William Smith 2 years ago2 years ago
Judy Barrera, Millie O'Donnell, Mark Nowag, and Professor Conrad are right: this framework is doomed, and its passage by the floundering State Board would provide yet another reason for parents in California, wherever & whenever possible, to withdraw their children from state schools and enrol them in private ones that are internationally competitive, which means completing mathematics advanced beyond calculus by the end of the 12th grade, after having finished the equivalent of … Read More
Judy Barrera, Millie O’Donnell, Mark Nowag, and Professor Conrad are right: this framework is doomed, and its passage by the floundering State Board would provide yet another reason for parents in California, wherever & whenever possible, to withdraw their children from state schools and enrol them in private ones that are internationally competitive, which means completing mathematics advanced beyond calculus by the end of the 12th grade, after having finished the equivalent of elementary algebra, geometry, data & probability, and intermediate algebra in an Integrated Mathematics series, levels 1-4, between the 6th & the 9th grades.
JudiAU 2 years ago2 years ago
If you want equity, start at the bottom with improved prenatal care, nutrition, daycare, and preschool. You can’t increase math understanding by holding a lid on math achievement. But I’m certainly glad it was based on flawed research that could not be replicated based on “ideas.” This plan will merely cause more middle class and wealthy families to leave public schools and even more outside math intervention and support in CA. The education department is … Read More
If you want equity, start at the bottom with improved prenatal care, nutrition, daycare, and preschool. You can’t increase math understanding by holding a lid on math achievement. But I’m certainly glad it was based on flawed research that could not be replicated based on “ideas.”
This plan will merely cause more middle class and wealthy families to leave public schools and even more outside math intervention and support in CA. The education department is effectively cutting off math achievement, advancement, and joy for families with fewer means. A few of the better quality option like CTY give financial aid but most programs like Russian Math, AOPS, Mr. math, IMACS, and even the state UC Scout does not. And if you want your learning differences considered or your need to fit your classes in between sleep away ballet on ice that costs as much as $8k at a place like Fusion.
So, great, choose between real math so you can complete with the world or “fries with that.”
Edith Cohen 2 years ago2 years ago
A very serious issue with the CMF recommendations is that they are not backed by data and evidence. Imagine making healthcare recommendations or approving medications in the same way: Would we accept -- "Research suggests that hanging kids upside down when sleeping increases blood supply to brain and fosters neuron growth" [pseudo citations] -- "Discourage children from walking before their first birthday or speaking more than 2-word sentences before their second birthday because this … Read More
A very serious issue with the CMF recommendations is that they are not backed by data and evidence. Imagine making healthcare recommendations or approving medications in the same way:
Would we accept
— “Research suggests that hanging kids upside down when sleeping increases blood supply to brain and fosters neuron growth” [pseudo citations]
— “Discourage children from walking before their first birthday or speaking more than 2-word sentences before their second birthday because this impedes their conceptual understanding” [pseudo citations].
This should be a show stopper. Why is it happening? How can the CDE/SBE responsibly produce/approve this? The citations misrepresent peer-reviewed papers, include non peer-reviewed opinion pieces that promote one of the author’s books, and critically, ignore massive evidence that points to the opposite of what is recommended. See Brian Conrad’s public comments (#3, #9) https://sites.google.com/view/publiccommentsonthecmf/#h.4tkvqmjm507t
The poor scholarship is *pervasive* and pertains to what, when, how, to teach. It will misdirect enormous resources (curriculum development and adoption, teacher training) at a time our CA students so badly need a positive change.
“WHAT” is not even what the CMF is tasked to do – it is about implementing teaching of existing content standards. The CMF pushed for hyped, misrepresented, poorly defined “data science” content. This contradicts adopted state content standards (that the framework is suppose to follow!!) and critically what UC and CSU are clearly clarifying to be their minimum admission requirements going forward.
See thread by Jelani Nelson: https://twitter.com/minilek/status/1678418359216488450
The CMF suggests removing content standards on the path to calculus even though an attempt to do so at SFUSD miserably failed (!!!). This, in order to justify their recommendations of restricting access to early preparation (“you can still get there”). This completely misses the point that the goal is not to rush unprepared students to calculus but to allow them to acquire solid foundations early on (including topics not needed for AP calculus), and importantly, develop mathematical thinking and fluency and the ability to process and internalize new concepts.
“HOW”: The recommended approaches are not proven to work and other approaches that did are not mentioned.
see https://twitter.com/tomloveless99/status/1678076194141659136
“WHEN”: The framework calls for restricting access to advanced math and preparation. This includes access to 8th grade Algebra and delay of basic fluency skills as Tom Loveless nicely pointed out (imaging delaying reading fluency to end of elementary)
Philip Gonsalves 2 years ago2 years ago
This framework will be a disastrous for students. To discourage school districts from offering Algebra I to 8th graders, is a disgrace and is malpractice. This is not done in other countries that are high preforming in mathematics – such as Singapore. I guess CA will never learn from real research such as the Third International Mathematics Study (TIMS) and other such studies. I guess more CA students should go to private schools or be … Read More
This framework will be a disastrous for students. To discourage school districts from offering Algebra I to 8th graders, is a disgrace and is malpractice. This is not done in other countries that are high preforming in mathematics – such as Singapore. I guess CA will never learn from real research such as the Third International Mathematics Study (TIMS) and other such studies. I guess more CA students should go to private schools or be home schooled. This framework is a disgrace and bad for students. It is time for parents in CA to speak out! This is unacceptable for CA.
Phil Gonsalves 2 years ago2 years ago
This Framework will set our students back even further. Once again CA is focused on politics and not doing what is right for students. Not only will our students suffer in mathematics but this will set them back in any hope of entering STEM college and careers. Have we learned nothing from the TIMSS or other studies that clearly show that Singapore knows how to teach mathematics? We were told to follow the Common Core … Read More
This Framework will set our students back even further. Once again CA is focused on politics and not doing what is right for students. Not only will our students suffer in mathematics but this will set them back in any hope of entering STEM college and careers. Have we learned nothing from the TIMSS or other studies that clearly show that Singapore knows how to teach mathematics?
We were told to follow the Common Core Standards (CCSS); we were told the CCSS will allow us to teach less standards but teach them deeper – that didn’t happen. It is not difficult to teach students how to think mathematically. I blame our politicians, or educational “leaders” and people like Jo Boaler for allowing politics to enter CA education. This Framework is a travesty and teachers, schools, and districts should not follow it and do what is right and teach their students how to think mathematically.
Dr. Bill Conrad 2 years ago2 years ago
Does the current math tragedy mean that I can finally forget the Quadratic Formula? This math farce reminds me of my years of training as a science teacher. We were exhorted to make sure we made the science hands on! Teachers were no longer the experts of science! They were to be guides on the side within a student centered zeitgeist. And absolutely no lectures and/or memorization of science facts! The result: a science illiterate citizenry … Read More
Does the current math tragedy mean that I can finally forget the Quadratic Formula?
This math farce reminds me of my years of training as a science teacher. We were exhorted to make sure we made the science hands on! Teachers were no longer the experts of science! They were to be guides on the side within a student centered zeitgeist. And absolutely no lectures and/or memorization of science facts!
The result: a science illiterate citizenry who reject the effectiveness of immunization!
No amount of twice a year school district 2-day math professional development triage will overcome the massive lack of math content knowledge, pedagogy, and assessment skills of teachers being churned out by woeful colleges of education. And of course no rigorous and accountable career ladders contribute to the math mess!
So on we go performing the same failed Kabuki Theater! Pathetic to say the least!
Replies
Judy Barrera 2 years ago2 years ago
Here you and I agree. My teaching colleagues and I subscribe to the "close the door and teach the way we should" method. I have not used a TE for a math program in over 15 years because they are so off. While I believe in bringing real life experiences into the classroom, using many hands on materials, etc. I also believe in mastering the basics and understanding the why. When my husband and I … Read More
Here you and I agree. My teaching colleagues and I subscribe to the “close the door and teach the way we should” method. I have not used a TE for a math program in over 15 years because they are so off. While I believe in bringing real life experiences into the classroom, using many hands on materials, etc. I also believe in mastering the basics and understanding the why. When my husband and I lived overseas, I saw how math was taught in China, Austria, France, Japan, and other countries. They all make sure students master basics and understand basic applications before moving onto more abstract and advanced thinking.
SD Parent 2 years ago2 years ago
California is literally importing students into STEM majors and careers from countries where math procedural fluency is the first focus and acceleration of math for the best students is encourage but believes that a focus on "conceptual fluency" and slowing the math progression instead are the solutions? Introducing real-world problems without procedural fluency will leave students floundering without the skills to actually solve these problems. The lack of student achievement in Math in … Read More
California is literally importing students into STEM majors and careers from countries where math procedural fluency is the first focus and acceleration of math for the best students is encourage but believes that a focus on “conceptual fluency” and slowing the math progression instead are the solutions? Introducing real-world problems without procedural fluency will leave students floundering without the skills to actually solve these problems.
The lack of student achievement in Math in California suggests that the real problem has been the lack of effective instruction. California has made a series of changes to math frameworks (and the math sequences) for more than five decades without actually improving student achievement or achievement gaps. Between these and the lack of authentic statistics to prove that the proposed changes will have the desired impacts, I have zero faith that this new math framework, like the others, will improve student outcomes.
Mark Nowag 2 years ago2 years ago
The beauty of Mathematics is it has no prejudice and does not discriminate. Now we are gong to add "the biggest and strongest part", equity? Ridiculous. “The biggest and strongest part of this framework are the chapters on teaching and structuring school experiences for equity and engagement,” Further, it is time to reinstate the SAT or ACT or some merit based exam to admissions in the UC system. Who has ever … Read More
The beauty of Mathematics is it has no prejudice and does not discriminate. Now we are gong to add “the biggest and strongest part”, equity? Ridiculous.
“The biggest and strongest part of this framework are the chapters on teaching and structuring school experiences for equity and engagement,”
Further, it is time to reinstate the SAT or ACT or some merit based exam to admissions in the UC system. Who has ever heard of a successful academic system that did not use merit based exams. If the exams are biased, fix them.
An acquaintance of mine has a son who was admitted to Stanford but rejected from UC Irvine. Evidence of a meritless system. I suppose his subjective letters of recommendation were not good enough.
Jack Jarvis 2 years ago2 years ago
That framework is going to be disastrous for students. It's already been pushed for the last five years in the state colleges, and the student teachers are having a very hard time. The idea that the class sits and listens to kids explain strategies they use to solve problems is all well and good if you have the conceptual knowledge, but the vast majority don't. Good news is the new math adoption is this year, … Read More
That framework is going to be disastrous for students. It’s already been pushed for the last five years in the state colleges, and the student teachers are having a very hard time. The idea that the class sits and listens to kids explain strategies they use to solve problems is all well and good if you have the conceptual knowledge, but the vast majority don’t.
Good news is the new math adoption is this year, so the new textbooks that will be based on this new framework won’t be available for seven years.
At some point, teachers need to provide direct instruction to students that begins with manipulatives and conceptual knowledge, Too many teach algorithmic knowledge, so I get why the framework is swinging towards more varied strategies, but this is a swing way too far. The fact most teachers ignore the tech tools ( I teach teacher tech and elementary teacher math at Fresno State) that publishers now include with their series is something that needs to change and can be accomplished immediately with required trainings that were paid for but not used last adoption.
Millie O'Donnell 2 years ago2 years ago
The CMF 3.0 will make CA student math proficiency worse than it is now. Take a look at what happened at SFUSD – which implemented the same proposals. Inequity also worsened at SFUSD, as those with resources went outside the public school system to take Algebra 1 and other math classes.
Your article ignores this.
elizabeth lamping 2 years ago2 years ago
It’s not the framework!
To paraphrase an old Clinton Era phrase, “It’s class-size, stupid.”
We can’t teach any framework effectively with so many students and little to no support.
Replies
Judy Barrera 2 years ago2 years ago
Yes! This is also a huge problem that causes behavior issues and hurts learning. It is very hard to meet with small groups when you have 39 students in your class.
Dr. Bill Conrad 2 years ago2 years ago
The research evidence is clear that reducing class size does not improve stdent academic achievement. Check out the work of John Hattie. Teachers continue to demonstrate a lack of content knowledge, pedagogy, and assessment skills with smaller class sizes. So no real improvement in academic achievement. Let’s set the record straight!
Judy Barrera 2 years ago2 years ago
With respect, The Brookings Institute, the Public Policy Institute, and others found that smaller class sizes in elementary levels significantly improved student achievement. Behavior issues dropped, teachers were able to meet with individual students and sell groups on a regular basis, and time management became easier. As a K-5 teacher, I've taught classes as large as 35 and as small as 10 in public schools and overseas private schools. I can't tell you how much … Read More
With respect, The Brookings Institute, the Public Policy Institute, and others found that smaller class sizes in elementary levels significantly improved student achievement. Behavior issues dropped, teachers were able to meet with individual students and sell groups on a regular basis, and time management became easier. As a K-5 teacher, I’ve taught classes as large as 35 and as small as 10 in public schools and overseas private schools. I can’t tell you how much easier it was to work with students when I had classes lower than 30 students. This past year one of my colleagues ended up with 39 4th graders in her classroom and even though she is an outstanding teacher with a special ed credential and an amazing amount of experience and knowledge, it was the toughest year she has had yet. She couldn’t run small groups due to the behavior issues that kept coming up. Think about how as adults we are uncomfortable when packed into a tight elevator or a large crowd. Now picture 30+ young students packed into a classroom built for 20. They act out. Class size does matter.
Dr. Bill Conrad 2 years ago2 years ago
You cannot use special case to support the effectiveness of small class size. Specific research that demonstrates low effect sizes for smaller class size: Project STAR (Student/Teacher Achievement Ratio) Study: The Project STAR study conducted in Tennessee in the late 1980s and early 1990s is one of the most well-known studies on class size reduction. It found that reducing class size in the early grades (K-3) had a positive effect on academic achievement in the short … Read More
You cannot use special case to support the effectiveness of small class size. Specific research that demonstrates low effect sizes for smaller class size:
Project STAR (Student/Teacher Achievement Ratio) Study: The Project STAR study conducted in Tennessee in the late 1980s and early 1990s is one of the most well-known studies on class size reduction. It found that reducing class size in the early grades (K-3) had a positive effect on academic achievement in the short term. However, the long-term effects were less substantial, with the initial gains fading out by the end of fourth grade. The effect sizes were relatively small and not statistically significant in later years.
Krueger’s Study in Texas: Economist Alan Krueger conducted a study in Texas in 1999, examining the effects of class size reduction on student achievement. The study found that while smaller class sizes in the early grades led to some improvements in test scores, the effect sizes were relatively small. Moreover, the benefits diminished as students progressed to higher grades.
The Project Challenge Study: This study conducted by the American Institutes for
Research (AIR) examined the impact of class size reduction in California. It found that reducing class size in the early grades had limited effects on student achievement. The study concluded that although smaller class sizes improved student behavior and engagement, the academic benefits were modest.
Angrist and Lavy’s Study in Israel: Angrist and Lavy conducted a study in Israel in 1999, analyzing the impact of class size reduction on student outcomes. The study found that while smaller class sizes had a positive effect on the achievement of advantaged students, they had little impact on the achievement of disadvantaged students. The overall effect size was relatively small.
Judy Barrera 2 years ago2 years ago
For 23 years I have taught in California public schools and overseas, mostly in 4th and 5th. Procedures and memorizing facts are key to math success and the further we get away from that, the worse our students do in math. If they can't add, subtract, multiply, or divide basic facts quickly, the more advanced math is out of reach or intimidating to many students. Over the years, as we've moved further away from … Read More
For 23 years I have taught in California public schools and overseas, mostly in 4th and 5th. Procedures and memorizing facts are key to math success and the further we get away from that, the worse our students do in math. If they can’t add, subtract, multiply, or divide basic facts quickly, the more advanced math is out of reach or intimidating to many students. Over the years, as we’ve moved further away from getting solid basics down before we start working on “big ideas”, I get more and more students who come to me already frustrated, behind, confused, and hating math. This is not fair to our children or our society. Go to other countries and you will see they push basic fact and procedures first and then move into less concrete learning. This aligns with how children’s brains develop. And if people are concerned about how we compare, other countries like China, Norway, Japan, etc. out perform us every time.
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Jimmy Le 2 years ago2 years ago
I agree. I spent 10 minutes a day with my 7 year old daughter on the multiplication tables up to 12×12 and after 3 weeks she memorized them all. Children who are failing math simply don’t have parents who put in the time to teach their children. All you need is 10 to 15 minutes a day less time on your phones and tablets and teach your children.