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| DMI MODULES
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| DMI
INSTITUTES
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| DMI IMPLEMENTATION AND RESEARCH
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| PROJECTS INVOLVING DMI
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Developing Mathematical
Ideas*
Developing
Mathematical Ideas (DMI) is a professional development curriculum designed
to help teachers think through the major ideas of K-7 mathematics and examine
how children develop those ideas. At the heart of the materials are sets
of classroom episodes (cases) illustrating student thinking as described
by their teachers. In addition to case discussions, the curriculum offers
teachers opportunities: to explore mathematics in lessons led by facilitators;
to share and discuss the work of their own students; to view and discuss
videotapes of mathematics classrooms; to write their own classroom cases;
to analyze lessons taken from innovative elementary mathematics curricula;
and to read overviews of related research.
DMI seminars are designed to bring together teachers from kindergarten
through middle grades to:
- learn mathematics
content
- learn to recognize
key mathematical ideas with which their students are grappling
- learn to support
the power and complexity of student thinking
- learn to appreciate
the power and complexity of student thinking
- learn how core
mathematical ideas develop across the grades
- learn how to continue
learning about children and mathematics
School systems that
have adopted innovative mathematics curricula have found DMI to be an
important support. The materials have been used with practicing teachers
in both summer institutes and school-year settings. In addition, DMI has
served as core curriculum for programs designed for teacher-leaders, administrators,
parents, and for pre-service teachers.
DMI Seminar Descriptions
DMI is comprised of seven seminars:
-
Number
and Operations, Part 1: Building a System of Tens •
Number and Operations, Part 1: Building a System of Tens Participants
explore the base-ten structure of the number system, consider how
that structure is exploited in multidigit computational procedures,
and examine how basic concepts of whole numbers reappear when working
with decimals.
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Number
and Operations, Part 2: Making Meaning for Operations •
Participants examine the actions and situations modeled by the four
basic operations. The seminar begins with a view of young children's
counting strategies as they encounter word problems, moves to an examination
of the four basic operations on whole numbers, and revisits the operations
in the context of rational numbers.
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Geometry:
Examining Features of Shape • Participants examine
aspects of 2D and 3D shapes, develop geometric vocabulary, and explore
both definitions and properties of geometric objects. The seminar
includes a study of angle, similarity, congruence, and the relationships
between 3D objects and their 2D representations.
-
Geometry:
Measuring Space in One, Two and Three Dimensions •
Participants examine different attributes of size, develop facility
in composing and decomposing shapes, and apply these skills to make
sense of formulas for area and volume. They also explore conceptual
issues of length, area, and volume, as well as their complex inter-relationships.
-
Working
with Data • Participants work with the collection,
representation, description, and interpretation of data. They learn
what various graphs and statistical measures show about features of
the data, study how to summarize data when comparing groups, and consider
whether the data provide insight into the questions that led to data
collection.
-
Number
and Operations, Part 3: Reasoning Algebraically about Operations
• Participants examine generalizations at the heart of the study
of operations in the elementary grades. They express these generalizations
in common language and in algebraic notation, develop arguments based
on representations of the operations, study what it means to prove
a generalization, and extend their generalizations and arguments when
the domain under consideration expands from whole numbers to integers.
- Patterns,
Functions, and Change • Patterns, Functions, and Change
Participants discover how the study of repeating patterns and number
sequences can lead to ideas of functions, learn how to read tables and
graphs to interpret phenomena of change, and use algebraic notation
to write function rules. With a particular emphasis on linear functions,
participants also explore quadratic and exponential functions and examine
how various features of a function are seen in graphs, tables, or rules.
Materials
for Participants: The Casebooks
Each seminar is
built around a casebook containing 25 to 30 cases, grouped into seven
chapters, which track a particular mathematical theme from kindergarten
through grade six. Casebooks begin with an overview of the seminar,
and each chapter contains an introduction intended to orient the reader
to the major theme of the cases in that chapter. They conclude with
an essay summarizing the ideas explored in the seminar through the lens
of educational research or from the perspective of a mathematician.
Materials
for Facilitators
The DMI
Facilitator’s Guides include detailed agendas for each
session. Other components are intended to help facilitators: identify
particular strategies useful in leading case discussions and mathematics
activities; plan seminar sessions; understand the major ideas to be
explored in each session; and think through issues of teacher change.
The DMI
Video Cases
show students in a wide variety of classroom settings with children
and teachers of different races and ethnic groups. While written cases
allow users to examine student thinking at their own pace, returning,
if necessary, to ponder and analyze particular passages, video offers
users the opportunity to listen to real student voices in real time
and provides rich images of classrooms organized around student thinking.
DMI
Institutes
The Developing Mathematical Ideas Institute is designed to provide classroom teachers, teacher-leaders, mathematics specialists, coaches, and administrators an opportunity to experience one of the DMI modules in a supportive learning community. At the one-week seminar, participants experience all eight sessions of the DMI module of their choice as a learner in sessions conducted by staff. The 2008 DMI Institute will be held
at Mount Holyoke College in MA July 12-18. The fee for the program
is $2000. Click here for more information.
The DMI Facilitation (DMIF) Institute is designed for teams of staff developers, teacher-educators, teacher-leaders and others who support teachers' professional development in mathematics K-8. Institute participants work in a community of peers to inquire into the goals of professional development for elementary and middle school mathematics, reflect on the kinds of structures and activities that can support those goals, and become familiar with DMI as a tool to forward the mathematics education agenda at their sites. The 2008 DMI Facilitation Institute will be held
at Mount Holyoke College in MA July 12-18. The fee for the program is $2000. Participants may also create a two-week program by linking the DMI Institute with the DMIF program for a fee of $2600. Click here for more information.
For More Information
To order materials
from Pearson Learning, call (800) 321-3106 or click here to visit the Pearson website. For more information about the DMI
Institutes,
visit the Mathematics Leadership Program website.
Since the DMI materials
became available for field testing in 1996, facilitators have come forward
with advice to other users. Some of these suggestions are captured in
the pages access through the link Advice from DMI
Users.
Associated with DMI
are a variety of research and direct service projects. The linked page,
Research into the Use and Impact of DMI,
lists the questions that are currently being investigated and identifies
the researchers. The following linked pages describe the different projects.
Teaching
to the Big Ideas 2 (1998-2003) funded by the National Science Foundation
, Deborah Schifter, Virginia Bastable, and Susan Jo Russell, coPIs.
Teaching
to the Big Ideas, (1993-99) funded by the National Science Foundation,
Deborah Schifter, Virginia Bastable, and Susan Jo Russell, co-PIs
Network
for Inquiry into Mathematics Education, (1995-99) funded by the National
Science Foundation, Linda Davenport and Deborah Schifter, co-PIs
The
DMI Network, (1997-2000) funded by the DeWitt Wallace-Readers Digest
Fund, Linda Davenport, director
Cultivating
Inquiry into the Teaching of Mathematics: A Seminar for Undergraduates,
(1997-99) funded by the Exxon Educational Foundation, Jill Lester, director
When
the learners' thinking takes center stage: A study of teacher and classroom
change, (1997-99) funded by the Spencer Foundation, Sophia Cohen,
director
Middle Grades Geometry Project: Examining Features
of Shape (2000-2001), funded by the SummerMath for Teachers Program
at Mount Holyoke College, Virginia Bastable
Developing Mathematical Ideas, Pre-service
Working Group (1999-present),
funded by the ExxonMobil Foundation, Jill Bodner Lester
For more information
about these projects and about sites at which DMI has been used, please
contact:
Deborah Schifter
Center for the Development of Teaching
Education Development Center, Inc.
55 Chapel Street
Newton, MA 02158
617-969-7100x2564
Dschifter@edc.org
* The DMI curriculum is the
result of a collaboration among the Educational Development Center, Inc.,
TERC, and Mount Holyoke College with funding provided by the National
Science Foundation and the ExxonMobil Foundation. Project directors are
Deborah Schifter, Susan Jo Russell, and Virginia Bastable
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