July 2019, Vol. 50, Issue 4
Investigating Teaching in Conceptually Oriented Mathematics Classrooms Characterized by African American Student Success
Jonee Wilson, Mahtab Nazemi, Kara Jackson, and Anne Garrison Wilhelm
This article outlines several forms of instructional practice that distinguished middle-grades mathematics classrooms that were organized around conceptually oriented activity and marked by African American students’ success on state assessments. We identified these forms of practice based on a comparative analysis of teaching in (a) classrooms in which there was evidence of conceptually oriented instruction and in which African American students performed better than predicted by their previous state assessment scores and (b) classrooms in which there was evidence of conceptually oriented instruction but in which African American students did not perform better than predicted on previous state assessment scores. The resulting forms of practice can inform professional learning for preservice and in-service teachers.
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