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Evidence and Research

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Review of studies described in "The Investigations

Curriculum and Children's Understanding of Whole

Number Operations" a research paper by Jan Mokros.
 

 


The paper, "The Investigations Curriculum and Children's Understanding of Whole Number Operations" describes four different studies that attempt to evaluate the effect of the Investigations curriculum on children's understanding of number and number operations.

General comments about the paper:

  • No information about if, or where, the original studies are published are available in this paper. Publication in a peer-reviewed journal, while not an absolute requirement, is an indicator of the quality of the study and is always preferable. Since no mention is made here one must assume they are not published in a peer-reviewed journal. (Peer-review indicates the study has been reviewed by impartial experts in the field).
  • Each of the studies was supported in part by the NSF, who has also funded the Investigations curriculum. While this practice is commonplace and acceptable, it is important to be aware of the potential for bias because of conflict of interest.


Study #1: "Learning Number Operations in Second Grade" by Mokros, et al 1996.

  • This study consisted of 50 students: 30 in the Investigations group and 20 in the comparison group.  No mention is made of how the subjects or classes are chosen. The preferred method is to choose the subjects randomly. While not always possible, the study MUST address how the subjects were chosen to have any credibility. There is potential for enormous bias if the subjects are not chosen randomly.
  • While the paper states that both groups come from an affluent community, it says nothing about the individuals in the group. It is critical that we know about the demographic characteristics of the participants. Socioeconomic status is the most powerful predictor of a student's performance in school. Any credible research would include a description of the participants and describe differences between the groups. No other confounding factors are described either.
  • The researchers do not tell us which comparison curriculum is used.  Since they do state students in the comparison group have been taught invented strategies, we can assume it is a similar type of new-new math curriculum.
  • Only outcome tests were given. Therefore we have no idea whether the two groups were comparable at the beginning of the study. A well designed study would have given a baseline test, so we could ascertain whether the students in either group were starting out with a disadvantage, and so that growth could be compared.
  • Children in both groups did relatively poorly on accuracy.  For example, only 60% of the Investigations group correctly solved a story problem requiring them to find the difference between 66 and 29. 

Summary: The subjects were not randomly selected, there is no discussion of confounding factors (particularly socioeconomic status) and we have no baseline information. These critical problems make drawing valid conclusions impossible.  In addition, the poor performance of both groups clearly demonstrates the ineffectiveness of "Standards-based" math curricula.

 



Study #2 "Full Year Pilot Grades 3 and 4" Mokros, et al, 1994

Summary: Without descriptive data about the composition of the groups and objective performance, no conclusions can be drawn.  The fact that children in the Investigations group performed better on the interview portion is not particularly meaningful. 

 

 



Study #3 "Construction of Number Sense by Second Graders", Goodrow, 1998

Summary: The fact that we know nothing about how these children were selected and have no information about confounding variables (most importantly socioeconomic status) makes this study essentially useless.

 



Study #4 "Children's Understanding of Multiplication, Division, and Proportional Reasoning", Flowers, 1998

Summary: Without knowing the socioeconomic status of the groups, and the way the participants were chosen, meaningful conclusions cannot be drawn from this study.



Synthesis of the review: Three of the four studies have critical methodological flaws, making their conclusions invalid. The remaining study, while methodologically sound (if we assume that the groups were reasonably well matched) uses outcome data with questionable validity.

The most important point is that none of these studies compared Investigations to a curriculum that is truly substantively different, such as SRA's Connecting Math Concepts, Saxon Math, or SRA Math: Explorations and Applications. When these types of comparisons are made, we may expect to see some meaningful data about how best to teach children math.

 


 

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updated: September 3, 2003