The State of Alabama faces significant challenges in providing a high-quality education
to all students. In the latest National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), Alabama
ranked forty-ninth of the 50 states at grade 4, and tied for last among the 50 states at
grade 8 (National Center for Educational Statistics 2008). The depth of the problem
becomes clearer when we consider the number of students deemed proficient by NAEP: Only
one in four of Alabama fourth-grade students were achieving at or above the level of
proficiency, and only one in 30 were at the advanced level. At the eighth grade, the
results show even lower levels of performance, with about one in five at or above
proficient, and one in 50 at the advanced level. As is true throughout much of the
country, there are significant disparities in performance between white and
African-American students and between students of poverty and students not living in
poverty. For example, only one in 25 African-American eighth-grade students scored at the
proficient level, as compared to one in four white students on the state NAEP mathematics
assessment. Thus, the mathematics performance across different groups of students needs
improvement.
A partnership including Auburn University, Tuskegee University
and 14 school districts in east Alabama was formed in November 2002 to face this
significant challenge. This partnership received major funding from the National Science
Foundation Math and Science Partnership program in 2003. It has also received a number of
other internal and external grants. A central goal of the partnership has been to ensure
that all students, including African-American and other historically underserved
groups, receive high-quality mathematics education. This requires a comprehensive set of
strategies addressing all aspects of the educational system. Thus, the partnership has
been working to systemically change what is happening in mathematics education across the
east Alabama region (cf. Kim, Crasco, Smithson, & Blank 2001). The project design
addresses five primary components, including: (1) curriculum alignment, (2) teacher leader
development, (3) intensive professional development, (4) outreach to stakeholders,
especially parents, and (5) improvement of teacher education.