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Teaching to the Standards: Math A Literacy-Based Approach for Students with Moderate and Severe Disabilities by Katherine Trela, PhD, Bree Jimenez, MS & Diane Browder, PhD University of North Carolina at Charlotte

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Teaching to the Standards: Math A Literacy-Based Approach for Students with Moderate and Severe Disabilities by Katherine Trela, PhD, Bree Jimenez, MS & Diane Browder, PhD University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Why Teach Math?. Math Around Us - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Why Teach Math?

Teaching to the Standards: MathA Literacy-Based Approach for Students with

Moderate and Severe Disabilities

by Katherine Trela, PhD, Bree Jimenez, MS& Diane Browder, PhD

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Page 2: Why Teach Math?

Why Teach Math?

• Math Around Us• Historically taught Daily

Living Skills in Real-Life Applications

• IDEA (2004) and NCLB (2001)– increased expectations

Page 3: Why Teach Math?

NCLB

• Target might be alternate achievement in some states (extended standards)

• Teams determine what the student will learn and how to teach it

Page 4: Why Teach Math?

What Makes Math Difficult for Some Students

• Communication challenges– Math requires reading, writing, discussing

• Strategy deficiencies– Not being able to perform basic operations

• Lack of past instruction– Focus only on functional math like money

• Memory challenges– Math facts, math concepts

Page 5: Why Teach Math?

Solution: Collaborate with Those Who Know

• Collaborate with math and science teachers• Study state and national web sites on

curriculum content• Review standards for grade level• Review textbooks• Attend professional development in the

content area

Page 6: Why Teach Math?

What to Teach?

Teaching to the Standard: Promoting the learning of math skills that link

to the standards of the student’s assigned grade level

Page 7: Why Teach Math?

Which Standards?

National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM)

• Numbers and operations• Measurement• Data analysis and probability• Geometry• Algebra

Page 8: Why Teach Math?

Full Inclusion (IDEA) and Access to the Curriculum (NCLB)

• General educator guides what is taught• Special educator guides how to support access

to that instruction

Collaboration Is Key

Page 9: Why Teach Math?

Literature Review Categories for Math68 experiments (65 articles)

37 36

2 2

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5

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Numbers andoperations

Measurement Data analysis Geometry Algebra

2

Browder, D., Spooner, F., Ahlgrim-Delzell, L., Harris, A., & Wakeman, S. (in press). A comprehensive review of research to teach math to students with significant cognitive disabilities. Exceptional Children.

Page 10: Why Teach Math?

Evidence-Based Procedures

• Systematic instruction • Task analysis• Application in real-life settings• Concrete materials (graphic organizers and

manipulatives) to bridge to abstract concepts

Page 11: Why Teach Math?

Determine the Content with General Educators

Task AnalysisAnalyze the steps to solve the math problem

StoryWrite a story for the math problem

Concrete ManipulativesCreate a “graphic organizer” and/or other manipulatives to learn the math operation

Template for Teaching to Math Standards

Page 12: Why Teach Math?

• Assistive TechnologyDevelop student response board or select AAC device to ensure student participation

• Teach and Monitor ProgressTeach the task analysis using systematic prompting and feedback until student masters

Page 13: Why Teach Math?

Math Lessons

• Five Lesson Plans per unit• 2 stories per lesson• Same task analysis but different levels of

support• 6 Enrichment Challenges per unit• Monitoring Progress page

Page 14: Why Teach Math?
Page 15: Why Teach Math?

StandardBroaden Use of the Coordinate PlaneExpand Spatial Reasoning

Page 16: Why Teach Math?
Page 17: Why Teach Math?
Page 18: Why Teach Math?

Algebra Standard

Perform operations with numbers and expressions to solve problems

Use formulas and algebraic expressions to model and solve problems

(learn to use symbols and that X is an unknown)

Page 19: Why Teach Math?
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Page 21: Why Teach Math?

Data Analysis Standard

Understand and use graphs and data to solve problems

Use representations to model and interpret physical, social, and mathematical phenomena

Page 22: Why Teach Math?
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Measurement Standard

Perform operations with numbers and expressions to solve problems

Page 25: Why Teach Math?
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Page 27: Why Teach Math?

Challenge Activities

• Includes extension activities for more learning to create opportunities for students to use the new skills in their lives

Monitoring Progress

Page 28: Why Teach Math?

Key Features• Designed specifically for students with mod to

severe disabilities at middle to high school level

• Accommodates students who are verbal or nonverbal

• Embeds evidence-based practices• Uses stories to make connection between

math and real life• Teach in gen ed or in resource room

Page 29: Why Teach Math?

Teaching to Standards: Math

Examples for middle and high school conceptsTeach all or some One year to complete in pilot study (students

with autism and mod and severe intellectual disabilities )

Page 30: Why Teach Math?

Teaching to Standards: Math

For the InstructorInstructors Guide Story Map Posters (11)CD-ROM with PDFs for creating manipulativesTraining DVD

For the StudentsMathWork bookCounting chipsDollar bills