Extending Universal Design for Learning through Concurrent Enrollment: Algebra Teachers’ Perspectives
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Integrating skill-building (e.g., critical thinking, problem-solving, written and verbal communication) with the acquisition of content knowledge
- Communicating clear expectations and providing constructive feedback
- Promoting interaction among and between teachers and students;
- Using teaching methods that consider diverse learning styles, abilities, ways of knowing, previous experience, and background knowledge
- Articulating a commitment to diversity and integrating multicultural perspectives into all aspects of the learning process.
1.1. Concurrent Enrollment as Access Strategy
1.2. UDL Framework for Concurrent Enrollment
2. Concurrent Enrollment Context: College Algebra through Modeling
2.1. What Is Mathematical Modeling Pedagogy?
2.2. Correspondences between Math Modeling Pedagogy and UDL
2.3. Concurrent Enrollment Features of the Algebra Course
3. Methods
3.1. Participants
3.2. Materials
3.3. Data Analysis
3.4. Limitations
4. Results
4.1. Common Perspectives on Pedagogy and Program Structure in the CIS Algebra Course
4.2. Was There Regional Patterning in Teachers’ Responses?
4.3. Teachers’ Concerns about the Program or Pedagogy
5. Discussion and Implications for UDL
5.1. Block One Results: Social and Emotional Development through Concurrent Enrollment Algebra
...I have kids every year who said, “I enjoy the model part, or the modeling part, better than I enjoy the actual chapter work we are doing.”[Outer Metro]
All of my students that do this class walk away believing that they can do college.[Outer Metro]
...when they can bring their own models to it, like in the Extend, I think that is the power of this program, and I remember specifically when we were sharing our Extends for that model this year for the class, the kids were really excited and some of them were saying things like, “I never knew math could be fun.”[Inner Metro]
I had a student tell me, that’s not in the class, that, “Oh I am just going to drive a truck. I am not going to have to learn about computers.” And I am going, “Uh, my father-in-law drove truck for a very, very long time, and he quit just as they were bringing in the computer log. So you are going to end up having to deal with this.”[Greater Minnesota]
This course here [is] in a setting that is much more comfortable to you. You do not have to feel intimidated because we all know each other here [...] You do not have to be afraid to raise your hand and ask a question. You can get much more individual help and guidance from me in this setting than you would probably be comfortable doing from a college professor.[Outer Metro]
I think something that is different in my CIS course is they ask a lot of college questions [...] and we can just talk about, okay, they say, “What if we were at the U [University of Minnesota] right now, what would this be like?” And so we really stop, and we have a lot of questions, like questions about college. And things I do not get to talk about with students often. But like, “What would it be like if you turned this in late in college?” You know, that kind of thing.[Inner Metro]
I will say this. I have a lot of kids who get Cs and a fair number who get Ds. And kids are not too thrilled with that, because they do not want to start their college transcript off with a C or a D. But the reality is the kids that I am getting into the course, and the work that they are producing, you know, I would love to give them As and Bs, but it really is not there as often as I would like to see it.[Outer Metro]
5.2. Block Two Results on Inclusive Instructional Practice
Well, they are used to that traditional model where there is a single answer at the end, and I find that kids at the beginning are very uncomfortable with the models [...] most of our models do have multiple levels of entry, which is awesome. They eventually really love that, but it is a very difficult thing early on. You are constantly reminding them, “Just explain why. Just explain why.”[Outer Metro]
I love the creative aspect of the class. And I like how I feel a little bit more free in what I can do and choose to do.[Outer Metro]
“Does she give you the answers?” And normally in my other classes, they would be so mad at me if I did not give them the answers, but my class goes, “No, no, nope, she is not going to give the answers, so you just have to work it out.” I was like (gasps). So it was okay that I was not giving them the answers. That was like, “Okay. I think I am doing this okay.”[Inner Metro]
I liked the questioning end of it, too. They question each other and even, myself, you can listen to them and say, “Well, what would you think of, you know, how about this? Or, how about this?” The questioning part of it, which I have had to learn better to do, because, obviously, I am older, and so I am very traditional in how I do. So, this class was a challenge for me to begin with.[Greater Minnesota]
... At the end of the year, she is like, “I cannot wait to write my paper.” She was so creative, and she would make like a story out of it. And her Extends were just like short stories. And she could not wait to turn those papers in so that I could read them, and she could show me how she related her solution to whatever thing she came up with. So [...] at the end of the year, she was like, “This is the best math class I have ever taken,” just because it was so different than a traditional math class. And she could see her learning throughout the year, too.[Outer Metro]
...this was a golden course for her [...] the modeling allowed her to take the time to really dig in, think about it, and put it in her own words. And she happened to be an A plus level writer. That’s where her true strength was. [...] Boy, was she incredible on those models. And for her, she could not wait for the next model. She hated any time we were in those books, that traditional style.[Outer Metro]
But I have really put a big emphasis on their writing skills [...] And so besides getting the math credit, they feel that they are more comfortable going into those classes that need a written paper for college.[Outer Metro]
I think the write-up part is hard for some of my ELL students. The actual going through the procedure, the hands on, the working together is a good thing. But then when they have to go and write a paper for it, that gets to be a difficulty.[Outer Metro]
when they turn their models in, sometimes they turn them in, in Spanish first, and then they work with the ESL [English as a Second Language] teacher to get it translated [...] It sort of depends on how recently they have been in the country. And their literacy in their primary language.[Inner Metro]
...some of the ones like “Traffic Jam”? (laughter) I think, “What do you mean, having to wait for the train?”[Greater Minnesota]
One specific model change that I do is the “Historic Hotels” which I think is a great model, but my students have absolutely no connection to historic hotels, it has not worked at all. So a few years ago, Sue helped me make a “Selling Tamales” one, where we got a tamale recipe from one of the students, and we just changed it, and it works great and they love it, because they can compare tamale recipes before we start.[Inner Metro]
...sometimes I try and pick things that represent not just my scientific background, but more of the social kinds of, like opioid addiction for babies, and things like that, that some of the kids seem to have more of a caring kind of response to.[Inner Metro]
5.3. Block Three Results on Inclusivity through Program and Administrative Structure
I would say racial and ethnical (sic)—ethnic diversity is probably stronger in my class than it is in the general population of Vermilion High School, along with private (sic) low income students. Things I have question marks about would be multilingual and ELL. I do not know if the percentages in my class are at or below the rest of Vermilion High School. And first gen (first generation)—I do not know that, I do not really survey students about that or anything.[Outer Metro]
...and you know, we do not have any, you know, ethnicity. [...] Not much there. All farmers there for the most part. But it is, you know, low to moderate income.[Greater Minnesota]
- Teacher 1:
- But we also have a lot of kids whose families qualify but they do not take it.
- Teacher 2:
- Right. They do not wanna fill out the forms.
- Lori:
- Really?
- Teacher 2:
- It is a status thing.
- Teacher 3:
- Yeah.
- Teacher 1:
- Some of them do not—like, the parents just do not want extra help. They are just like, “We are gonna do this on our own. We are not taking any hand out.”
- Teacher 2:
- “I do not need that.”
- Teacher 3:
- Yeah.
- Lori:
- Wow. That is interesting.
- Teacher 1:
- We are a pretty strong red county. “No government handouts.”
It took me two years to get my department to agree to have the course. They were worried that it would take away enrollment from some of the upper level courses.[Outer Metro]
We just got it a week or so ago from the university that, “This is how much your students save by being in a CIS class,” and stuff like that. And I always forward that on to my superintendent. And he then takes it to the school board.[Greater Minnesota]
I have never filled my classroom. So I feel like I am not going to turn a kid away from it when I have 17 kids in my class this year. If I have 18, that is fine. I do not have 35 kids in my class.[Outer Metro]
...I have had several discussions about, you know, “Wait a minute, we have got to think carefully before we just label one as the upper college algebra and the lower college algebra,” [...] I think long term, the modeling idea is going to stick with the kids far more than any rudimentary procedural skill type that you would see in your standard college algebra course.[Outer Metro]
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
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Pedagogy Themes and Examples |
---|
1. Modeling changes students’ attitudes. |
18 teachers, 67%. |
|
2. Student growth through writing. |
17 teachers, 63%. |
|
3. Rewrites or selects models for greater local relevance. |
14 teachers, 52%. |
|
4. Close relationships with and understanding of students. |
10 teachers, 37%. |
|
Program Structure Themes and Examples |
---|
1. Socioeconomic or demographic categories describe students. |
23 teachers, 85%. |
|
2. Teacher negotiates tensions in University and school administrative expectations. |
17 teachers, 63%. |
|
|
3. “Academic middle” describes students in the class. |
12 teachers, 44%. |
|
4. Free university credit motivates students or their parents. |
13 teachers, 48%. |
|
5. Class serves more females than males. |
10 teachers, 37%. |
|
Teacher Concerns about Pedagogy |
|
Teacher Concerns about Program Structure |
|
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Staats, S.; Laster, L.A. Extending Universal Design for Learning through Concurrent Enrollment: Algebra Teachers’ Perspectives. Educ. Sci. 2018, 8, 154. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci8040154
Staats S, Laster LA. Extending Universal Design for Learning through Concurrent Enrollment: Algebra Teachers’ Perspectives. Education Sciences. 2018; 8(4):154. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci8040154
Chicago/Turabian StyleStaats, Susan, and Lori Ann Laster. 2018. "Extending Universal Design for Learning through Concurrent Enrollment: Algebra Teachers’ Perspectives" Education Sciences 8, no. 4: 154. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci8040154
APA StyleStaats, S., & Laster, L. A. (2018). Extending Universal Design for Learning through Concurrent Enrollment: Algebra Teachers’ Perspectives. Education Sciences, 8(4), 154. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci8040154