More than a test : teacher sensemaking of educational policies and assessments to inform mathematical opportunities in elementary classrooms

Placeholder Show Content

Abstract/Contents

Abstract
Research on mathematics classroom learning opportunities shows that student's experiences with mathematics affects not only what they learn, but also how they view themselves as learners and doers of mathematics (Boaler, 1997, 2016; Jackson, 2009; Langer-Osuna, 2016). High-stakes testing policies have implications for the kinds of mathematics instruction students receive given that teachers' sense-making and instructional decisions can vary based on state and local policies (Nelson et al., 2012; Bertrand & Marsh, 2015; Diamond, 2007; Spillane et al., 2002). The norms and activities that teachers plan are ultimately informed by the ways that teachers make sense of these policies and how their decisions translate into practice. Opportunities to learn arise from these norms and activities that teachers cultivate in the classroom and shape how students engage with mathematics (Gresalfi & Cobb, 2006; Greeno & Gresalfi, 2008). Yet, little work has focused on the relationship between testing, classroom practices, and, in particular, how teacher sensemaking of high-stakes testing policies enable or constrain opportunities to learn for students. This dissertation seeks to provide insight into the multilayered relationship between educational policies and students' mathematical identity development by highlighting the role that teachers play in making sense of and drawing on policies to shape mathematical learning opportunities in 3rd and 4th grade classrooms. By engaging the analytic lens of teacher sensemaking, this qualitative study centers the voices of teachers broadly across California and Texas as a means to understand how they made instructional decisions when federally mandated assessments were introduced. This study further provides deeper insights into how teachers' sense-making was translated into practice and how students perceived the learning opportunities in the classroom to inform their mathematical dispositions and conceptions of mathematical identity. My first findings chapter highlights that there were clear differences in the knowledge that teachers had about federal, state, and district policies. This knowledge informed what teachers reported needing to focus on for their decisions for teachers in Texas, and a lack of knowledge provided opportunities for teachers in California to exercise more agency in their instruction. Even though almost all teachers reported feeling that policies focused on assessments had negative consequences such as narrowing their instructional focus and the effect on student morale, they still felt that assessments provided necessary data for holding teachers and students accountable. For teachers in dual-language or bilingual classrooms, the varying policies that teachers navigated highlights the complex practice of sense-making that teachers further engaged in. Teachers felt constrained when the language of assessments differed from the language of instruction. Additionally, when so much emphasis continues to be placed on English-language proficiency, teachers unintentionally reify negative language ideologies for linguistically diverse students. My second findings chapter centers around two teachers within one California school district. While the teachers highlighted in this chapter spoke to a focus on district benchmarks as important for accountability, they remained committed to their own educational philosophies and engaged in student centered practices. The teachers' ability to construct lessons centered around providing opportunities to learn (Gresalfi & Cobb, 2006) was reflected in the learning opportunities students reported. The dual-language teacher embraced translanguaging practices, shaped by her own experiences as an emergent bilingual. Additionally, students in these classrooms reported productive mathematical disposition and more positive conceptions of their own mathematical identity. These two classrooms provide a snapshot to the relative thickness of the learning opportunities that teachers can provide when they have freedom to advocate for their own instructional decisions that are not prescriptively aligned to mandated assessments. Given the context of this study being conducted during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, there were additional differences in approaches to instructional delivery across states. In Texas, the shift to hybrid, hi-flex teaching led to additional constraints for teachers. In contrast, for teachers in California that remained virtual the majority of the school year, it provided an opportunity to focus on big ideas, allowing teachers to center student learning to counter learning loss narratives. Since the onset of the pandemic, teachers and students were forced to drastically reimagine what teaching and learning looks like (Esteves et al., 2021). However, educational policies and the assessments utilized to uphold them have remained virtually the same. My study has implications for how we imagine moving forward to ensure maintaining rigorous mathematics teaching and learning expectations for students, while acknowledging the realities of how schooling has shifted since 2020. We must reimagine policies for learning, that center the learning needs of those students who have historically been at the margins of education.

Description

Type of resource text
Form electronic resource; remote; computer; online resource
Extent 1 online resource.
Place California
Place [Stanford, California]
Publisher [Stanford University]
Copyright date 2022; ©2022
Publication date 2022; 2022
Issuance monographic
Language English

Creators/Contributors

Author Chavez, Rosa Del Carmen
Degree supervisor Langer-Osuna, Jennifer
Thesis advisor Langer-Osuna, Jennifer
Thesis advisor Boaler, Jo, 1964-
Thesis advisor Domingue, Ben
Thesis advisor Martínez, Ramón, 1972-
Degree committee member Boaler, Jo, 1964-
Degree committee member Domingue, Ben
Degree committee member Martínez, Ramón, 1972-
Associated with Stanford University, Graduate School of Education

Subjects

Genre Theses
Genre Text

Bibliographic information

Statement of responsibility Rosa Del Carmen Chavez.
Note Submitted to the Graduate School of Education.
Thesis Thesis Ph.D. Stanford University 2022.
Location https://purl.stanford.edu/rt277zt4955

Access conditions

Copyright
© 2022 by Rosa Del Carmen Chavez
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 3.0 Unported license (CC BY-NC).

Also listed in

Loading usage metrics...