• Login
    View Item 
    •   NU Archives Home
    • Scholarship
    • Dissertations and Theses
    • Master in Teaching (MIT)
    • View Item
    •   NU Archives Home
    • Scholarship
    • Dissertations and Theses
    • Master in Teaching (MIT)
    • View Item
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    The Development and Efficacy of the Core Plus Mathematics Project Secondary Mathematics Curriculum

    Thumbnail
    Tweet
    View/Open
    wisehart_rod_mit_2009_07_28.pdf (11.65Mb)
    Date
    NaN
    Author
    Wishart, Rod
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    By the early 1980s it was clear that the education of students in the United States was falling behind most other developed countries especially in math and science. This resulted in a significant shift from the “traditional” mathematics teaching methods of rote procedure and practice to “reformed” methods which encouraged students to discover mathematical concepts using investigation and collaboration. Out of this reform movement arose the Core-Plus Mathematics Project (CPMP) curriculum, which has since become the most widely used reform curriculum in the United States. Because the reform philosophy represents a significant change from traditional Mathematics education, it was perhaps inevitable that reform methods in general, and the CPMP in particular would spark controversy between educators, researchers, parent groups, school districts, and governmental agencies. This has become so much the case that the reform and traditional camps now both seem willing to let the education of students become a second priority to winning the “math war.” This research paper uses historical methods to ask “does the data support the claim that the CPMP curriculum is more effective than traditional mathematics curricula?” It uses historical documents to consider the forces that gave rise to the reform mathematics philosophy and the creation of the CPMP. It describes the key features of the CPMP which differ from traditional curricula and summarizes the research which has sought to evaluate its effectiveness. Ultimately the research seems to indicate that both proponents and critics of reform curriculum have valid points, but that both are guilty of selective data analysis and exaggeration to make their claims. The data seems to me to show that while the CPMP shows good promise as an effective mathematics curriculum, its promise is being overshadowed by extremists on both sides of the debate who cling to their philosophical positions so tightly that neither will consider the valid arguments made by the other. Sadly, the casualties in this battle are students – who are receiving a less effective mathematics education than they should.
    Original item type
    PDF
    Original extent
    vi, 48 pages
    Subject
    Mathematics
    Collections
    • Scholarship > Dissertations and Theses > Master in Teaching (MIT)
    URI
    archives.northwestu.edu/handle/nu/25743
    Copyright
    This original work is protected by copyright. Copyright is retained by the author(s). Works may be viewed, downloaded, or printed, but not reproduced or distributed without author(s) permission.

    Browse

    All of NU ArchivesCategories & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitles

    My Account

    Login

    About the Archives

    Donate

    Share your stories

    Find Yourself in the Archives

    Policy

    Copyright

    Maintained by the Northwest University Library

    © 2017 Northwest University

    Scholarship 

    • Dissertations and Theses
    • Faculty Publications
    • Syllabi

    NU History 

    • Biographies
    • Histories
    • Objects
    • Press Clippings

    Events and Photos 

    NU Publications 

    • Academic Catalog
    • Graduate Academic Catalog
    • Karisma Yearbook
    • The Talon Newspaper
    • Northwest Passages
    • Pursuit
    • The Northwesterner
    • Northwest
    • Student Handbook
    • Student Bulletin

    Independent Collections 

    • Henry Ness
    • Butterfield Family
    • Eugene Bronson

    Institutional Records 

    • Employee Publications
    • Library

    About the Archives

    Donate

    Share your stories

    Find Yourself in the Archives

    Policy

    Copyright

    Maintained by the Northwest University Library

    © 2017 Northwest University

    Scholarship 

    • Dissertations and Theses
    • Faculty Publications
    • Syllabi

    NU History 

    • Biographies
    • Histories
    • Objects
    • Press Clippings

    Events and Photos 

    NU Publications 

    • Academic Catalog
    • Graduate Academic Catalog
    • Karisma Yearbook
    • The Talon Newspaper
    • Northwest Passages
    • Pursuit
    • The Northwesterner
    • Northwest
    • Student Handbook
    • Student Bulletin

    Independent Collections 

    • Henry Ness
    • Butterfield Family
    • Eugene Bronson

    Institutional Records 

    • Employee Publications
    • Library