Remillard (1999)
The article Curriculum Materials in Mathematics Education Reform: A Framework for Examining Teachers' Curriculum Development was written by Janine Remillard and published in Curriculum Inquiry in 1999. The article is available from the Wiley Online Library at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/0362-6784.00130/abstract.
Abstract
This paper presents a model of teachers' construction of mathematics curriculum in the classroom or their curriculum development activities. The model emerged through a qualitative study of two experienced, elementary teachers during their first year of using a commercially published, reform-oriented textbook that had been adopted by their district (Remillard 1996). The aim of the study was to examine teachers' interactions with a new textbook in order to gain insight into the potential for curriculum materials to contribute to reform in mathematics teaching. The resulting model integrates research on teachers' use of curriculum materials (cf. Stodolsky 1989) and studies of teachers' construction of curriculum in their classrooms (cf. Doyle 1993). The model includes three arenas in which teachers engage in curriculum development: design, construction, and curriculum mapping. Each arena defines a particular realm of the curriculum development process about which teachers explicitly or implicitly make different types of decisions. The design arena involves selecting and designing mathematical tasks. The construction arena involves enacting these tasks in the classroom and responding to students' encounters with them. The curriculum mapping arena involves determining the organization and content of the entire curriculum into which daily events fit. Through articulating each piece of the model, the author highlights the complex and multidimensional nature of teachers' curriculum processes, identifies significant characteristics of each arena that have implications for textbook use and instructional change, and indicates areas that call for further understanding and research.
Detailed Summary of Curriculum Materials in Mathematics Education Reform: A Framework for Examining Teachers' Curriculum Development
What We Know About Teacher–Curriculum Relationships
Teachers as Curriculum Developers
An Introduction to the Teachers and the Study
Method
Introduction to the Teachers
The Teachers' Role in Curriculum Development
Task Selection in the Design Arena
Task Enactment and Adaptation in the Construction Arena
The Relationship Between the Design and Construction Arenas
The Curriculum Mapping Arena
Perspectives on Teachers' Curriculum Development
Multiple Dimensions of Textbook Use
The Nature of the Construction Arena
The Importance of Teachers' Reading
Concluding Thoughts
About
Mendeley
APA
Remillard, J. T. (1999). Curriculum materials in mathematics education reform: A framework for examining teachers’ curriculum development. Curriculum Inquiry, 29(3), 315–342. doi:10.1111/0362-6784.00130
BibTeX
@article{Remillard1999, abstract = {This paper presents a model of teachers' construction of mathematics curriculum in the classroom or their curriculum development activities. The model emerged through a qualitative study of two experienced, elementary teachers during their first year of using a commercially published, reform-oriented textbook that had been adopted by their district (Remillard 1996). The aim of the study was to examine teachers' interactions with a new textbook in order to gain insight into the potential for curriculum materials to contribute to reform in mathematics teaching. The resulting model integrates research on teachers' use of curriculum materials (cf. Stodolsky 1989) and studies of teachers' construction of curriculum in their classrooms (cf. Doyle 1993). The model includes three arenas in which teachers engage in curriculum development: design, construction, and curriculum mapping. Each arena defines a particular realm of the curriculum development process about which teachers explicitly or implicitly make different types of decisions. The design arena involves selecting and designing mathematical tasks. The construction arena involves enacting these tasks in the classroom and responding to students' encounters with them. The curriculum mapping arena involves determining the organization and content of the entire curriculum into which daily events fit. Through articulating each piece of the model, the author highlights the complex and multidimensional nature of teachers' curriculum processes, identifies significant characteristics of each arena that have implications for textbook use and instructional change, and indicates areas that call for further understanding and research.}, author = {Remillard, Janine T.}, doi = {10.1111/0362-6784.00130}, journal = {Curriculum Inquiry}, number = {3}, pages = {315--342}, title = {{Curriculum materials in mathematics education reform: A framework for examining teachers' curriculum development}}, url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/0362-6784.00130/abstract}, volume = {29}, year = {1999} }