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For Immediate Release
November 13, 2003
Contact:
Alison Cohen
617-618-2109
acohen@edc.org
Boston University, EDC Partnership is Awarded $10 Million to Improve Mathematics Teaching, Curricula in Grades 5-12
"Focus on Mathematics" implemented in five Massachusetts districts, aims to set national model
BOSTON, MA – Boston University—in partnership
with Education Development Center, Inc. (EDC) and five Boston-area school
districts—has been awarded a $10 million grant from the National
Science Foundation to build a mathematical community of expert teachers
who will collaborate with university mathematicians and educators in a
sustained effort to increase student achievement.
The Focus on Mathematics partnership taps the expertise of Boston University,
EDC, and educators from the University of Massachusetts at Lowell, Worcester
Polytechnic Institute, and Lesley University, working with middle and
high school teachers in Arlington, Chelsea, Lawrence, Waltham, and Watertown
schools.
Leading this effort to improve student achievement are Glenn Stevens,
professor of mathematics in Boston University's Department of Mathematics
and Statistics, and Wayne Harvey, Director of the Division of Mathematics
Learning and Teaching and a Vice President of EDC, one of the world's
leading education research organizations, based in Newton.
"Our ultimate goal is to substantially increase student achievement
in mathematics," said Harvey. "We want students to find math
engaging, and intellectually satisfying. We want to give them the kind
of world-class mathematics that can only come from teachers who are part
of a community of experts in mathematics, teaching, and learning,"
Harvey said.
Key to the success of Focus on Mathematics will be the program's creation
of solid, content-based professional development opportunities in the
five Massachusetts districts, and a new professional Master's Degree Program
at Boston University, which will serve as a national model.
“Our partnership puts rigorous mathematics at the center of students'
work, teachers' professional development, and prospective teachers’
preparation,” said Stevens, of BU. “By creating a community
of school and university mathematicians and learning and sharing mathematics
together we will raise the level of mathematical content in the schools,
while improving the quality of mathematics instruction at the university
level," Stevens said.
Mathematics teachers in the partnership will be invited to participate
in a range of mathematics-related activities, including summer institutes,
study groups, seminars, online courses, and colloquia. A number of teachers
will prepare to become Mathematics Teaching Fellows, who will then serve
as resources, conducting their own seminars and workshops, and offering
on-call support and mentoring for teachers in their schools.
Boston University's Department of Mathematics and Statistics
offers a strong research environment in algebra, applied statistics, dynamical
systems and their applications, geometry, mathematical neuroscience and
biology, mathematical physics, number theory, partial differential equations,
and probability. The Department is a part of the College of Arts and Sciences,
1 of the 17 schools and colleges of Boston University, the fourth largest
independent university in the United States.
Education Development Center, Inc. (EDC) is one of the world’s leading nonprofit education and health organizations, with 325 projects in 50 countries. EDC brings researchers and practitioners together to advance learning and healthy development for individuals of all ages and institutions of all types. For more information, visit www.edc.org.
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