Our hypotheses is that building a learning community where teachers jointly think about
their teaching, talk together about mathematics, open their classroom doors, and make
their teaching public will lead to a pedagogy more focused on students and the mathematics
they are learning and ultimately to higher student achievement.
Teachers' conversations will:
- become more focused on
mathematics
- address issues of teaching and learning to a greater extent
Teachers will
- become more observant about what
contributes to and what inhibits student understanding
- more knowledgeable about
the mathematics they are teaching
- engage all of their students in learning
mathematics
All students will
- perform at a
higher level on both school-based measures and state assessments
- be more engaged
in mathematics
- be motivated to do mathematics including taking more and higher
level courses