Transcript Document

The Georgia Department of Juvenile Justice
Math Consortium
Forsyth Georgia
February 24, 2011
The Georgia Department of Education
Achieving the K-12
Common Core State Standards in Mathematics
2
Common Core for Mathematics
Grade-Level Standards


K-8 grade-by-grade standards organized by domain
9-12 high school standards organized by conceptual categories
Standards for Mathematical Practice



Describe mathematical “habits of mind”
Provide standards for mathematical proficiency: reasoning, problem
solving, modeling, decision making, and engagement
Connect with content standards in each grade
3
The K-8
Mathematics Standards
The K-5 standards provide students with a solid foundation
in whole numbers, addition, subtraction, multiplication,
division, fractions and decimals.
The 6-8 standards describe robust learning in geometry,
algebra, and probability and statistics.
Modeled after the focus of standards from high-performing
nations, the standards for grades 7 and 8 include
significant algebra and geometry content.
Students who have completed 7th grade and mastered the
content and skills will be prepared for algebra in 8th grade.
4
The High School
Mathematics Standards

Call on students to practice applying mathematical ways
of thinking to real world issues and challenges;

Require students to develop a depth of understanding and
ability to apply mathematics to novel situations, as
college students and employees regularly are called to do;

Emphasize mathematical modeling, the use of
mathematics and statistics to analyze empirical situations,
understand them better, and improve decisions;

Identify the mathematics that all students should study in
order to be college and career ready.
5
Model Course Pathways for Mathematics
Courses in higher level mathematics: Precalculus, Calculus (upon completion of Precalculus),
Advanced Statistics, Discrete Mathematics, Advanced Quantitative Reasoning, or other
courses to be designed at a later date, such as additional career technical courses.
Algebra II
Mathematics
III
Geometry
Mathematics
II
Algebra I
Mathematics I
Pathway A
Pathway B
Traditional in U.S.
Integrated approach
6
What about the alignment
of CCSS with GPS?
What percentage of Georgia's mathematics standards
appear in the Common Core?
10%
Matched State Standards
90%
Unmatched State Standards
7
How does CCSS
compare to GPS ?
Example
Common Core G-CO 8:
Understand congruence in
terms of rigid motion.
Explain how the criteria for
triangle congruence (ASA,
SAS, and SSS) follow the
definition of congruence in
terms of rigid motions.
GPS MM1G3c: Students
will discover, prove, and
apply properties of
triangles, quadrilaterals,
and other polygons.
Understand, use , and
prove theorems for
triangles (SSS, SAS, ASA,
AAS, HL)
8
How does CCSS
compare to GPS ?Conti.
Common Core F-BF4b:
Find inverse functions.
Verify by composition
that one function is the
inverse of another.
GPS M2A5d:
Students will explore
inverses of functions.
Use composition to
verify that functions
are inverses of each
other.
9
CCGPS Draft
Alignment Documents
Brad Bryant, State Superintendent of Schools
“We will lead the nation in improving student
achievement.”
10
CCGPS Draft Alignment
Documents
11
CCGPS Mathematics
Timeline
September
Precision Review
Webinars
12
CCGPS
Courses & Pathways
Food for Thought
Standards: Important but insufficient

To be effective in improving education and
getting all students ready for college, workforce
training, and life, the Standards must be
partnered with a content-rich curriculum and
robust assessments, both aligned to the
Standards