Full Description
This book looks at how teachers implement national math and science standards in their classrooms. A collaboration between Richard Lehrer and Leona Schauble (education researchers) and elementary school teachers, these teacher-authored chapters provide important insights about how children think and reason as they pose questions, collect data, and build data models to answer their questions. While the spotlight is primarily on student understanding and its development over time, the text also highlights teachers' professional development of a specific form of knowledge. Becoming a virtual "observer" as teachers orchestrate data modeling activities in their classrooms, you'll see not just what was taught, but how it was taught.
Contents
Children's work with data; How children organize and understand data; How much traffic? Beep! Beep! Get that car off the number line!; What's typical? A study of the distributions of items in recycling bins; Shadows; Graphing; Graphing artistry: Data displays as tools for understanding literary devices; Data models of ourselves: Body selfportrait project; Classification models across the grades