R&D Related to the ByExample Approach
Read more:
Our Research
Hear more from principal investigator Julie Booth
- Part 1: Why AlgebraByExample is Different
- Part 2: Why Working with Correct and Incorrect Examples is Beneficial
- Part 3: Fine-Tuning the ByExample Approach
- Part 4: How AlgebraByExample Transforms Classroom Culture
The SERP-MSAN Partnership
- a supplemental approach (because these are always the first to be cut when budgets tighten)
- an intervention that targeted minority students alone (because this would exacerbate stereotype threat)
- a whole new curriculum (because too much time is lost in political battles to introduce the curriculum, and performance drops while a new curriculum is learned.
Partner School Districts
- Ann Arbor Public Schools, MI (2011-2013)
- Arlington Public Schools, VA (2007-2010, 2012-2013)
- Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Public Schools, NC (2010-2012)
- Evanston Township High School, IL (2007-2010)
- Evanston/Skokie School District 65, IL (2007-2013)
- Green Bay Public Schools, WI (2010-2012)
- Madison Metropolitan School District, WI (2007-2013)
- Shaker Heights School District, OH (2007-2013)
Partner Universities
- Temple University
- Carnegie Mellon University
- University of Rochester
- University of Wisconsin-Madison
Publications
Development of AlgebraByExample was led by Julie Booth (Temple University) through a SERP collaboration with the Minority Student Achievement Network (MSAN). The SERP-MSAN partnership has been supported to conduct this work by The Goldman Sachs Foundation and by the Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education, through Grant R305A100150 to Strategic Education Research Partnership Institute. The information provided does not represent views of the funders.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License .