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SCHOOL OF MATHEMATICS INVOLVEMENT
IN THE NEW K-12
This past year saw a major shift
in the Minnesota public schools
(K-12) standards, and members
of the School had a significant
impact in the process of producing
and adopting these changes. This
is an excellent example of the
service to the larger community
by our faculty. The process by
which these changes were made
was very complicated, requiring
great deal of interaction with
the legislators and the state
government. The School faculty
members participating in this
important endeavor were Professors
Bert Fristedt, Larry Gray and
Chester Miracle. Professor Gray
was, at the time, Director of
Undergraduate Studies, and became
the Head of the School in September
2003. Professor Fristedt has given
us the following account of the
process that led to the new standard.
In February 2003, the new state
of Minnesota Commissioner of Education,
Cheri Pierson Yecke, formed an
Academic Standards Committee,
consisting of approximately 80
people to write new math and language
arts state standards for K-12
(that is, Kindergarten through
grade 12). The standards that
were developed will be important
for the children of our state
in the years to come. The following
paragraphs give some insight into
the process of developing these
standards.
For the math subcommittee of 40,
three School of Mathematics faculty
where chosen: Bert Fristedt, Lawrence
Gray, and Chester Miracle. The
Mathematics Department at the
Morris campus of the University
of Minnesota was represented by
Peh Ng. Another important contributor
to the work of this subcommittee
was Lesa Covington Clarkson, who
is on the faculty in the Department
of Curriculum and Instruction
here on the Twin Cities campus.
William Beck and Jerald TerEick
of the School of Mathematics were
not on the Academic Standards
Committee, but made extremely
important contributions in an
8-hour session arranged by Fristedt
and Miracle with them and some
members of the math subcommittee.
Beck and TerEick are retired high
school mathematics teachers who
have for several years been on
our staff as teaching specialists.
Within the math subcommittee there
were further subcommittees: Fristedt
served first on the 9-12 subcommittee
and later on the 6-8 subcommittee,
whereas Gray did the reverse.
Miracle and Ng were on the 9-12
subcommittee throughout and Covington
Clarkson was on the 6-8 subcommittee.
Gray and Covington Clarkson were
also on a composition subcommittee
of six, chosen by the Commissioner
to compose a well-written document
integrating the ideas from the
K-2, 3-5, 6-8, and 9-12 math subcommittees.
This subcommittee did a superb
job, especially considering the
severe time-constraint that was
imposed by virtue of the Federal
`No Child Left Behind' legislation.
This document accommodates the
mathematics relevant for a mathematics-rich
college major while emphasizing
the mathematics that all should
learn in order to have constructive
roles as citizens, as well as
skills that are relevant for a
wide variety of occupations.
With reference to the preceding
paragraph, one might ask: What
is so novel about that? Is that
not what has always been done?
With these two questions in mind,
the following paragraph gives
a bit of relevant background.
In the somewhat distant past,
the state of Minnesota had very
minimal high school mathematics
requirements. A long period followed
in which there was an attempt
to entice all students to take
more mathematics and to really
learn the mathematics that they
took. Roughly speaking this attempt
had four strands, not all occurring
at the same time and often occurring
in reaction to other strands,
but also not fully disjoint from
each other either: (a) practice
in being skillful in mathematical
procedures; (b) develop an understanding
of mathematics concepts; (c) learn
about mathematics in real-world
contexts; (d) learn mathematics
by a variety of techniques that
some might view as non-traditional,
such as group discussions or discovery
learning. A further complicating
feature is that item (b), in particular,
is subject to vastly different
interpretations. In 2000-2002,
Gray, in his then role as Director
of Undergraduate Studies in the
School of Mathematics, had been
contacted by several scores of
parents in the state complaining
about the mathematics content
in the schools. Gray, and occasionally
Fristedt, visited many schools
and parents groups at the invitation
of parents or school administrators,
and Fristedt started to make contacts
with legislators on this issue.
What had happened is that strands
(c) and (d) above had become dominant,
partly because of the way that
the Minnesota 'Profiles of Learning'
law had been written. In particular,
the emphasis on (d) had pushed
calculational skill and the accompanying
understanding in arithmetic and
algebra to the sidelines.
Therefore, when a chance developed
to create new state standards,
Fristedt and Gray were ready to
volunteer in order that doing
arithmetic and algebra be restored
to its rightful place in K-12
and basic geometry to 9-12. [The
K-8 `Profile of Learning' standards
in geometry were generally fine
and in some cases "better
than fine", but the 9-12
geometry standards were vague
and unnecessarily weak, especially
given the fine K-8 preparation.]
Fristedt contacted Ng and Gray
contacted Miracle, and both Ng
and Miracle responded by also
volunteering.
Besides the official subcommittee
meetings, Fristedt, Miracle and
Ng joined the Commissioner at
several meetings throughout Minnesota
where the Commissioner sought
public input on an early draft.
At most of these, committee members
were quiet listeners and observers,
since many non-committee members
wished to speak. An exception
was the meeting in Onamia where
it developed that Miracle was
the main contributor. He was able
to make two important points about
the proposed standards: (i) that
they represent a consensus, bringing
together a variety of views of
K-12 teachers, post-secondary
faculty, parents, and business
people; (ii) that they are outcome-focused
while accommodating a variety
of teaching styles.
There was no attempt to include
calculus standards for those who
have accelerated through the K-12
system in mathematics, but an
accelerated student would typically
take calculus in high school.
A non-accelerated student who
masters the material in the standards
is well-prepared to succeed in
post-secondary calculus. Of course,
it is not expected that all students
would be tested in high school
on all of the standards---the
standards focusing on the to-calculus
path beyond what would be expected
of all were primarily the work
of Miracle with input from several
others on the 9-12 subcommittee,
most notably Steven Jones, the
chair of mathematics at Mankato
West High School.
All on the mathematics subcommittee
took their tasks very seriously,
but besides those described above,
the author of this article noticed
that several deserve special mention.
These include all six members
of the composition subcommittee
who gave so freely of their time.
Besides Gray and Covington Clarkson,
there were two who had won Minnesota
teacher-of-the-year awards (in
different years, of course) ---Ellen
Delaney, a high school teacher
from North St. Paul and Barbara
Stoflet, an elementary school
teacher from the Hopkins school
district---and Nancy Nutting,
the chair of Sci-Math Minnesota
and Ellen Hoerle, a chemical engineer
from Eden Prairie, who at present
is a stay-at-home mother.
There are also others whose contributions
were very special. John Kappler,
a computer scientist from Shoreview,
made a wide variety of specific
nicely focused contributions to
the 9-10-11 standards on which
the grade 11 state mathematics
test should be based; he did this
both in the official committee
meeting and in the informal session
with Beck and TerEick mentioned
above. Dale Akkerman, a physician
from Burnsville, made several
important contributions in the
6-8 math subcommittee, especially
in adding richness to the standards
without making the standards for
grades 7 and 8 into mini-algebra
standards. David Klitzke, a sixth
grade teacher from Lester Prairie
was a major player in creating
the sixth-grade standards, especially
in connection with the items related
to prime numbers and factoring.
The input of Kim Ross, a former
mathematics teacher who is now
superintendent of the Houston,
Minnesota School District, guided
the committee to solid but realistic
6-8 standards. Fristedt called
on two other non-committee members
for what turned out to be valuable
input into the 9-10-11 standards:
Julie Guelich, the Dean of Natural
Sciences and Mathematics at Normandale
Community College and long-time
member of the Mathematics Department
there, and Len Mrachek, who taught
for more than a quarter century
in Minnesota technical colleges,
and as a "retired person"
currently teaches mathematics
in General College here on the
Twin Cities campus.
Once the standards were written,
there were hearings by the relevant
committees in the House, the Senate,
and by the joint-house-senate
conference committee. Besides
the general testimony of the Commissioner,
most of the subject-specific testimony
was given by Delaney, Fristedt,
and Gray.
As the process goes forward with
state tests aligned to the new
standards and school districts
possibly asking for suggestions
or clarifications, Fristedt, Gray,
and Miracle, as well as the Institute
of Technology Center of Education
Programs directed by our own faculty
member Harvey Keynes, are resources
on which the State can call to
provide substantive input.
Bert Fristedt, Professor of Mathematics
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