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Mathematical Critical Areas- Learning Progressions Overview November 2011.

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Presentation on theme: "Mathematical Critical Areas- Learning Progressions Overview November 2011."— Presentation transcript:

1 Mathematical Critical Areas- Learning Progressions Overview November 2011

2  Understand that the critical areas describe key mathematical concepts for students to learn at each grade level.  Identify that the critical areas are designed to bring focus to the standards at each grade level.  Consider how the critical areas can be used to inform curriculum and guide instruction. 2 November 2011

3 3

4 4 How will focusing on specific Critical Areas improve teaching and learning? Grade level PKK12345678 # of Critical Areas 2244433443 CourseAlg IGeoAlg IIMath IMath IIMath III # of Critical Areas 464654

5 For each grade level from kindergarten through grade 8, the Critical Areas outline the essential mathematical ideas for each grade level. 5 November 2011

6  In Kindergarten, instructional time should focus on two critical areas:  (1) representing and comparing whole numbers, initially with sets of objects; (2) describing shapes and space.  More learning time in Kindergarten should be devoted to number than to other topics.  1. Students use numbers, including written numerals, to represent quantities and to solve quantitative problems, such as counting objects in a set; counting out a given number of objects; comparing sets or numerals; and modeling simple joining and separating situations with sets of objects, or eventually with equations such as 5 + 2 = 7 and 7 – 2 = 5. … November 2011 6

7 http://www.corestandards.org/assets/CCSSI_Mathematics_Appendix_A.pdf November 2011 7

8  Describe Critical Areas ◦ Read about Critical Areas for your grade level or course. ◦ Record the Critical Areas on an individual Foldable. November 2011 8 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RB WEXiM-eMw&feature=related

9 ◦ Create a poster: use words and/or pictures to describe the focus for your grade level or course. ◦ Study the posters to discover if the areas are at the current grade level/course at a new grade-level/course, or dropped from the expectations. ◦ Look at the K-12 progression of learning November 2011 9

10  Place your “Big Ideas” sticky notes on the corresponding Critical Area poster.  Discuss your findings in grade-band groups (K- 2, 3-5, 6-8, and 9-12) ◦ what you keep ◦ what you add ◦ what you move or drop November 2011 10

11  Report from each grade level on biggest idea for the grade.  How do the mathematical concepts build from grade to grade?  Compare the concepts in the critical areas with those that you are currently teaching. How are they similar? How are they different? 11 November 2011

12  Read each content standard, marking the recording sheet with a:  √ when a standard strongly matches your Critical Area and  ? when you are not sure  Did every standard fall within a Critical Area?  Are there standards that fall within more than one Critical Area?  Do all the standards within a cluster fall within the same Critical Area? November 2011 12

13  How do the critical areas help to bring focus to the standards at your grade level?  How will you use the critical areas to inform your curriculum and guide your instruction?  What questions do you still have about the critical areas? 13 November 2011

14  Jean Howard Mathematics Curriculum Specialist (406) 444-0706; jhoward@mt.govjhoward@mt.gov  Cynthia Green ELA Curriculum Specialist (406) 444-0729; cgreen4@mt.govcgreen4@mt.gov  Judy Snow State Assessment Director (406) 444-3656; jsnow@mt.govjsnow@mt.gov November 2011 14


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