
What's Sophisticated about Elementary Mathematics?
Plenty—That's Why Elementary Schools Need Math Teachers
By Hung-Hsi Wu
(This article is available in PDF format only)
Improving mathematics instruction is a priority in the United States, but there's little agreement on how to do it. Here's an idea that is rarely discussed: starting no later than fourth grade, math should be taught by math teachers (who teach only math). Teaching elementary math in a way that prepares students for algebra is more challenging than many people realize. Given the deep content knowledge that teaching math requires—not to mention the expertise that teaching reading demands—it's time to reconsider the generalist elementary teacher's role.
Understanding Place Value
Teaching the Standard Algorithms
Defining Fractions
Piece by Piece
How Schools Solved the Achievement Puzzle and Soared
By Karin Chenoweth
(This article is available in PDF format only)
After five years of visiting high-poverty and high-minority schools that have demonstrated success, Karin Chenoweth has noticed a handful of key characteristics that these schools share: genuine teacher collaboration, a sharp focus on what students must learn, assessments that inform instruction, and strong relationships between adults and children.
Coaxing the Soul of America Back to Life
How the New Deal Sustained, and Was Sustained by, Artists
By Roger G. Kennedy
(This article is available in PDF format only)
During the Great Depression, thousands of artists were hired to depict "the American Scene." While the works revealed much suffering, they also captured the hard-working, self-reliant spirit of the people.
Growing Together
American Teachers Embrace the Japanese Art of Lesson Study
By Jennifer Dubin
(This article is available in PDF format only)
Lesson study is a form of professional development in which teachers work together to develop a lesson and think about how students learn. The point is not the resulting lesson so much as what teachers learn as they study the content, consider instructional methods, and reflect on how their chosen approaches influence student understanding.
Learning Science
Content—With Reason
By Paul R. Gross
(This article is available in PDF format only)
A recent study claimed that learning scientific content does not give students an edge in scientific reasoning. But the preponderance of the evidence clearly indicates that learning scientific content does enhance scientific reasoning—and students and scientists need both.











