Ohio Mathematics and Science Coalition Suggested Practices:
Evaluation
of Mathematics Instructional Materials
Select 5 or more critical benchmarks or indicators from the Ohio
Mathematics Academic Content Standards at a grade band for which the
materials are planned. These choices should reflect what your
selection committee judges as important for students to know,
understand, and be able to do as they develop mathematical knowledge,
skills and understanding.
Instructional
Materials/Textbook Considerations:
Do the instructional materials address each critical benchmark or
indicator adequately, and at the grade level or grade band selected?
Are there clear connections between the activities/lessons and the
critical mathematics benchmarks or indicators selected?
Are there any significant misalignments or omissions of the content and
processes expected by the standards for the grade level or grade band
selected?
Is problem solving a significant part of how the material is presented?
Do the materials provide opportunities for students to write about
mathematics and their mathematical understanding?
Do the materials develop a series of questions, investigations or tasks
that encourage students’ mathematical communication through reading,
discussion, writing, and reflection?
Do the materials provide open-ended questions and problems that assess
student thinking?
Do the materials require students to engage in reasoning and
justification or proof?
Do the materials provide questions at different levels of cognitive
demand (rote memorization, skill development, concept development,
mathematical problem solving)?
Do the materials use and encourage the development of multiple
representations of mathematics (concrete, pictorial, and symbolic)?
Do the materials balance sufficient practice sets with tasks that
require higher level thinking?
Do the materials help students to make connections with other
mathematics topics, phenomena that occur in their daily lives, and
other subject areas/disciplines?
Do the materials provide a range of activities and questions to reach a
wide range of student capabilities, including the very high?
Do the materials vary the types of questions to reflect student
performance expected on state assessments (short answer, multiple
choice, and student constructed response)?
Do the materials provide suggestions and opportunities for
differentiated homework or problem sets based on students’ differing
needs?
Does the instruction and assessment provided by the materials align
with Ohio’s achievement assessments and other standardized testing
(e.g. Iowa Tests, ACT, SAT, etc.)?
Do the materials incorporate technology to help develop student
understanding for both instruction and assessment?
Do the instructional materials provide opportunities for students to
develop understanding about mathematics through hands-on investigations?
Additional
Considerations:
Do the teacher support materials provide evidence of the research base
used to develop the program of study? Is this research provided
to teachers in some form to help them better understand the program’s
design and approaches to instruction?
Do the teacher support materials provide intervention suggestions and
materials to help students who develop at a slower rate?
Do the teacher support materials provide extension and enrichment
suggestions and materials to help students learn mathematics to deeper
levels?
Do the teacher support materials help to make connections with other
mathematics topics, students’ daily lives, and other subject
areas/disciplines?
Do the teacher support materials specify the prior knowledge that needs
to be in place before the lesson? Are there references and
connections to earlier sections of the material where the prior
knowledge was addressed?
Do the teacher support materials provide dialogue or annotations to
help teachers develop content knowledge and a deeper understanding of
mathematical topics?
Do the teacher support materials provide suggested calendar maps and
daily time management suggestions?
Does the program provide examples and suggestions for formative
(ongoing and informative) assessments to help teachers understand each
student’s development?
Do the teacher support materials provide samples and methods to help
teachers examine a range of student thinking/student response?
Do the materials provide assistance in structuring and modifying tasks
or lessons to accommodate different types of learners?
Are the materials likely to provide a positive change from the status
quo for students and teachers?
Do the teacher support materials provide suggestions and technical
assistance for the technologies and applications used to develop
student understanding?
Do the teacher support materials provide suggestions and support for
alternative assessment options? For example,
student-developed projects may be suggested by the text. If so,
do the teacher support materials provide descriptions of what the
project should consist of and how students’ projects will be reviewed
and graded (rubric)?
Is there a high likelihood that the instructional materials and teacher
support materials will help students and teachers to address local and
state content standards and performance expectations?
Is high-quality support available from the publisher to help meet local
professional development needs?
Additional
Resources:
View the AAAS Project 2061 Instructional Materials Review Process
http://www.project2061.org/publications/textbook/default.htm?ql