2016
Core-Plus Mathematics

High School - Gateway 3

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Cover for Core-Plus Mathematics
Note on review tool versions

See the series overview page to confirm the review tool version used to create this report.

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Gateway Ratings Summary

Usability

Gateway 3 - Meets Expectations
83%
Criterion 3.1: Use & Design
8 / 8
Criterion 3.2: Teacher Planning
7 / 8
Criterion 3.3: Assessment
7 / 10
Criterion 3.4: Differentiation
8 / 10
Criterion 3.5: Technology Use
Narrative Only

Criterion 3.1: Use & Design

8 / 8

Use and design facilitate student learning: Materials are well designed and take into account effective lesson structure and pacing.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series meet the expectation that the materials are well-designed and take into account effective lesson structure and pacing. The design of the materials, in print and in the eBook, distinguishes between problems and exercises, and it also is not haphazard. The consistent order of the sections, Investigations followed by Applications delineated as On Your Own, Connections, Reflections, Extensions, and Review, helps to make students accustomed to the layout. Throughout the materials, students are asked to present their understanding of the mathematics in a variety of ways, and the materials also integrate the use of physical and virtual manipulatives that are faithful representations of mathematical objects.

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Indicator 3a

2 / 2

The underlying design of the materials distinguishes between problems and exercises. In essence, the difference is that in solving problems, students learn new mathematics, whereas in working exercises, students apply what they have already learned to build mastery. Each problem or exercise has a purpose.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series meet the expectation that the underlying design of the materials distinguishes between problems and exercises. The materials clearly organize learning in a specified order of an Investigation phase, sometimes with multiple concepts, followed by an On Your Own phase. Problems for learning new mathematics are within the Investigation phase, and exercises which build mastery and student capacity for a given skill with application are in the On Your Own phase. Items for application require multiple representations and extend learning, and they do build on knowledge based in the Investigation phases. Similarly, problems in the Investigation phase often contain real-world applications but use the application to introduce concepts and build knowledge. This structure is repeated throughout each of the courses. For example, in Course 2, Unit 5, Lesson 1, the Investigation phase begins on page 327 with multiple investigations followed by the On Your Own phase on page 345.

Indicator 3b

2 / 2

Design of assignments is not haphazard: exercises are given in intentional sequences.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series meet the expectation that the design of assignments is not haphazard and tasks are given in intentional sequences. Throughout the curriculum, assignments are given in an intentional manner, often building capacity for the learner through reasoning. This progression includes the development of mathematically accurate vocabulary, methods, and formulas. Examples that highlight how the design of the assignments is not haphazard and tasks are given in intentional sequences include: the investigations in Lesson 2 of Unit 2 in Course 1; the applications in Lesson 2 of Unit 5 in Course 2; and the investigations in Lesson 1 of Unit 7 in Course 3.

Indicator 3c

2 / 2

There is variety in how students are asked to present the mathematics. For example, students are asked to produce answers and solutions, but also, arguments and explanations, diagrams, mathematical models, etc.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series meet the expectation that there is variety in how students are asked to present the mathematics. The materials require students to engage in mathematics in a number of ways to solve various types of problems that include evaluating expressions, making predictions based on a set of data, estimating measurements and using geometric tools, and comparing/contrasting information from a diagram. Examples of these types of problems can be found on page 67 in the materials for Course 1. Other problems allow students to engage in the process of solving a problem through planning and to build a mathematical model from given data (Course 2, Unit 6, Lesson 2, page 435-452, applications section). At other times, students are asked to give explanations, write equations, and create a diagram (Course 3, Unit 1, Lesson 2, page 44).

Indicator 3d

2 / 2

Manipulatives, both virtual and physical, are faithful representations of the mathematical objects they represent and when appropriate are connected to written methods.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series have manipulatives, both virtual and physical, that are faithful representations of the mathematical objects they represent and when appropriate are connected to written methods.

Physical manipulatives are utilized to introduce reasoning in problem solving. For example, counters are used in a problem referencing consecutive integers in Course 1, Unit 1, Lesson 1. In Course 1, Unit 6, Lesson 1 on page 371, virtual manipulatives are used to generate work with triangle congruence, and they are also used in Course 2, Unit 6, Overview on page T399A, to construct vertex-edge graphs to investigate problems and concepts in modeling and optimization.

The series makes use of a wide range of virtual manipulatives available within CPMP-Tools, and there are physical manipulatives needed for each course listed within the Planning Guide. A few examples of these include, but are not limited to rubber bands, meter sticks, compass, straightedge, protractor, rulers, pennies, dice, stopwatch, bouncy balls, linkage strips and pipe cleaners.

Indicator 3e

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The visual design (whether in print or digital) is not distracting or chaotic, but supports students in engaging thoughtfully with the subject.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series have a visual design that is not distracting or chaotic but supports students in engaging thoughtfully with the subject. The materials keep a consistent layout for units and lessons. In general, the sections appear in the following order: Investigations followed by Applications delineated as On Your Own, Connections, Reflections, Extensions, and Review. Lessons frequently include other sections to enhance students' depth of knowledge with a variety of approaches that include Think about this Situation, Summarize the Mathematics, and Promoting Mathematical Discourse. Pictures and models used throughout the series support student learning as they are connected directly to an investigation or problems being solved. The figures and models used are not distracting from the mathematical content.

Criterion 3.2: Teacher Planning

7 / 8

Teacher Planning and Learning for Success with CCSS: Materials support teacher learning and understanding of the Standards.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series meet the expectation for supporting teacher learning and understanding of the Standards. There are plenty of questions provided to teachers to aid in planning and providing effective learning experiences, and the materials contain numerous ways in which they help teachers present the mathematical content and use embedded technology to aid students' learning. The materials do include adult-level explanations to help teachers increase their own learning. Although there are focus and connected standards provided for each lesson, the materials do not clearly explain the vertical progression of the standards across the series or how the learning of the lessons fits into a vertical progression of learning.

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Indicator 3f

2 / 2

Materials support teachers in planning and providing effective learning experiences by providing quality questions to help guide students' mathematical development.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series meet the expectation that teachers are provided quality questions to guide students' mathematical development. The opening page of the lessons contains a scenario that touches on the mathematics to be studied, and the next page contains a section titled Think About This Situation where students are given questions to discuss. Guiding questions are provided for teachers and students at the beginning of each investigation. The teacher edition provides typical student responses that might be expected and suggestions for follow-up questions to enrich the discussion. With the teacher edition, there is an additional Promoting Mathematical Discourse section for some lessons where a sample discussion is given for use in planning. The Implementation Guide suggests that teachers work through these pages together during planning.

In the student edition, within a lesson at the end of each Investigation, there is a Summarize the Mathematics section that provides a series of well-designed questions to have students reflect on what they have learned. The teacher edition provides the same support for Summarize the Mathematics as was mentioned above for Think About This Situation. For an example, see Course 2, Unit 4.

Indicator 3g

2 / 2

Materials contain a teacher's edition with ample and useful annotations and suggestions on how to present the content in the student edition and in the ancillary materials. Where applicable, materials include teacher guidance for the use of embedded technology to support and enhance student learning.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series meet the expectation that the teacher edition contains ample and useful annotations. There are annotations in the margins and in the narrative related to the lesson implementation. There are also boxes labeled “Instructional Notes” that cover points like specific goals for a particular question, where and how a topic was previously addressed, helpful reminders for students, thoughts on pacing, and concepts students may not yet fully understand. Other special boxes include Assignment Note, Differentiation, Teaching Resources, Key Idea, Collaboration Skills, Possible Misconception and Common Error.

CPMP Tools is an online dynamic software package embedded in the instructional materials that is referenced extensively and is freely available to the students in and out of class time. It is employed in every unit across all three courses. In the teacher edition there are boxes titled “Technology Note,” which offer guidance to teachers on the use of CPMP Tools that supports and enhances student learning. For an example, see Course 2, Unit 3, Lesson 1 starting on page T162. The use of this tool is also referenced in the planning guide at the start of each unit. (Course 2, page T161D)

Indicator 3h

2 / 2

Materials contain a teacher's edition that contains full, adult--level explanations and examples of the more advanced mathematics concepts and the mathematical practices so that teachers can improve their own knowledge of the subject, as necessary.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series meet the expectation that the teacher edition contains adult-level discussion of the mathematics. Special boxes in the teacher edition are used to give teachers an “advanced perspective” on some of the material covered. Course 3, page T116B, has such an example. There are also “Additional Resources” that refer teachers to specific publications that may enhance their understanding of the topics (Course 1 on page T367). In some cases, there is a list of additional references in the overview of the Unit (Course 1 on page T237).

Indicator 3i

1 / 2

Materials contain a teacher's edition that explains the role of the specific mathematics standards in the context of the overall series.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series partially meet the expectation that the teacher edition addresses the standards in the context of their place in the entire series. The materials for the series do not provide a vertical progression for the standards in the series. For some units, the materials provide general references in the Unit Overview as to how current content fits into the vertical progression of learning, for example, page T319 in Course 3, but these general references are not provided for all units, for example, page T73-73A in Course 1. At the beginning of each lesson, there is a list of standards that are "Focused on" and "Connected to" in the lesson, for example, page T462 in Course 1, but this list does not make references to any other lessons in the series. The combination of the list of standards for each lesson and the general references in the Unit Overview could explain the role of the specific standards in the context of the overall series, but the inconsistency of the general references leaves the explanation of the role of the specific standards in the context of the overall series incomplete.

Indicator 3j

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Materials provide a list of lessons in the teacher's edition, cross-- referencing the standards addressed and providing an estimated instructional time for each lesson, chapter and unit (i.e., pacing guide).

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series have planning guides in the teacher edition for each unit of each course. They appear at the start of each unit and are broken down by lesson with a pacing guide giving the total days for coverage including assessment. The guide also includes objectives for each lesson and suggested assignments for each investigation for full coverage. Teachers may add additional help or enrichment to the suggested assignments. There is also a list of additional resources by lesson included in the planning guide (Course 3, page T161). In addition, at the back of the student textbook, there is a listing of the standards covered in each Investigation for each lesson for every unit in the course (Course 3, page 638).

At the start of each lesson in a unit, there is a page in the teacher guide that indicates which standards are “focused on” or “connected to” in the lesson. This page also contains an explanation of what will happen in the lesson and, depending on the lesson, additional information may be included. (Course 3, page T162).

Indicator 3k

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Materials contain strategies for informing students, parents, or caregivers about the mathematics program and suggestions for how they can help support student progress and achievement.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series contain strategies that provide for communications with students and parents about the mathematics covered, support opportunities, and progress indicators. The Implementation Guide has an entire section on outreach to parents (page 24). It contains sample letters that might be sent to parents describing the program and shares a link for parent resources, www.wmich.edu/cpmp/parentresource.html. This website provides information for parents that includes an overview of the content, a video of what the classroom will look like, and suggestions on how parents can help their student to understand the key mathematical ideas in units from each of the three courses. Also included are selected solutions, partial solutions, and hints for homework tasks. There is a description of the Math Toolkit where students keep a personal online notebook that parents can access to aid in homework and study help. There are also links to research on the methodology behind the curriculum design.

Indicator 3l

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Materials contain explanations of the instructional approaches of the program and identification of the research--based strategies.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series contain explanations as to why certain approaches are taken. The Implementing Core-Plus Mathematics Guide for teachers includes detailed explanations that address why the materials take the approach they do. The Classroom Implementation section, pages 31-75, addresses the methods employed, how and why they should be used, and provides references to research that supports the methods used and their inclusion in the classroom.

Also, at the beginning of each unit, the Unit Overview page of the Teacher’s Edition includes a discussion of the pedagogy that will be implemented and why it is appropriate. Whether the context is new to students (Course 1, page T361) or building on prior knowledge (Course 2, page T521), other information related to pedagogy, technology, misconceptions, and background knowledge of the context is also provided.

The materials do reference research-based instructional approaches beyond the Implementation Guide. The teacher editions for each course reference research in the teacher notes for pertinent lessons (Course 1, page T268 “Instructional Note" and page T293 “ELL Tips;” Course 2, page T116 ”Equity;” and Course 3, page T58A “Differentiation” ).

Criterion 3.3: Assessment

7 / 10

Assessment: Materials offer teachers resources and tools to collect ongoing data about student progress on the Standards.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series partially meet the expectation that the materials offer teachers resources and tools to collect ongoing data about student progress on the Standards. The lessons offer some opportunities to informally assess students' prior knowledge, and feedback for review and practice exercises is limited. The assessments provided do not clearly denote which standards are being emphasized, but the assessments do provide sufficient guidance for teachers in following up on student performance.

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Indicator 3m

1 / 2

Materials provide strategies for gathering information about students' prior knowledge within and across grade levels/ courses.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series partially meet the expectation for gathering students' prior knowledge within and across grade levels/courses. There are no formal assessments of prior knowledge or connections to learning from Grades 6-8 or previous courses. There are some instances in the materials where students' prior knowledge is assessed, for example the Lesson Launch on pages T108-109 in Course 3, and used to launch an investigation into new learning, but these informal assessments are not a part of all units or lessons. For example, in Course 2, Unit 3 addresses transformations and distance, but the materials do not include any opportunities for teachers, formally or informally, to determine what prior knowledge students might have about these topics from either Grades 6-8 or Course 1. There are some Instructional Notes that address prior knowledge, such as on page T114A in Course 3, but these Instructional Notes are inconsistently placed throughout the materials. Also, the Review section in the On Your Own homework sets provide an opportunity to review previous concepts and skills, but there is limited support for teachers as to how the information gathered from the review problems could be used in current or future lessons.

Indicator 3n

2 / 2

Materials provide support for teachers to identify and address common student errors and misconceptions.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series meet the expectation that teachers are given support to identify and to address common student errors and misconceptions. There are multiple teaching tips provided, referred to as "Common Error," for example, page T219 in Course 1, or "Possible Misconception," for example, page T507A in Course 2, to assist teachers with addressing these needs in their classroom. Additionally, there are problems included in the materials that allow for students to identify errors and critique reasoning.

Indicator 3o

1 / 2

Materials provide support for ongoing review and practice, with feedback, for students in learning both concepts and skills.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series partially meet the expectation that the materials in the series provide opportunities for ongoing review and practice of both skills and concepts. Although opportunities to review concepts and skills are provided through Summarize the Mathematics tasks, On Your Own Review practice problems, and Looking Back Lessons, attention to feedback is limited to answer guides for questions and in some Instructional Notes, for example, page T221 in Course 1 and page T328 in Course 2.

Indicator 3p

Narrative Only

Materials offer ongoing assessments:

Indicator 3p.i

1 / 2

Assessments clearly denote which standards are being emphasized.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series partially meet the expectation that standards are clearly denoted. Assessments created in the eAssessments tool through ConnectED have the ability to denote CCSSM (listed as National Standards), but standards are not explicitly identified for formative or summative assessments that are provided. Standards are identified at the beginning of each unit/lesson, but individual problems in assessments are not labeled with standards.

Indicator 3p.ii

2 / 2

Assessments provide sufficient guidance to teachers for interpreting student performance and suggestions for follow-up.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series meet the expectation that assessments provided include sufficient guidance in interpreting scores by having answer keys and solutions to all assessments, detailed answers and solutions for lesson components (On Your Own homework, Check Your Understanding, Think about the Situation, and Summarize the Mathematics), and both specific and general scoring rubrics. The implementation guide also provides guidance for how to create specific rubrics for individual questions.

Indicator 3q

Narrative Only

Materials encourage students to monitor their own progress.

The materials in the series encourage students to monitor their own progress. The Core-Plus Implementation Guide suggests that students keep a journal in which to reflect on their mathematical struggles and successes. Per the guide, "Journals also encourage students to assess their own understanding of, and feelings about, the mathematics they are studying." Additionally, teachers are encouraged to implement portfolios in their classroom as a way for students and teachers to monitor student progress. According to the implementation guide, "Typically, portfolios provide a tool for assessing one or more of the following outcomes: student thinking, growth over time, mathematical connections, a student's views on herself or himself as a mathematician, and the problem-solving process as employed by the student."

Within the curricular materials, students are able to assess themselves using the Check Your Understanding for every investigation as well as through guided class discussions. The remaining types of tasks in On Your Own sets include Reflections which provide opportunities for students to re-examine their thinking about ideas in the lesson.

Criterion 3.4: Differentiation

8 / 10

Differentiated instruction: Materials support teachers in differentiating instruction for diverse learners within and across grades.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series partially meet the expectation that the materials support teachers in differentiating instruction for diverse learners within and across courses. The instructional materials do not provide specific strategies to aid teachers in implementing differentiated instruction, and there is not enough scaffolding provided for students whose mathematical knowledge is not at their current course level. There is a Spanish Glossary in each student textbook, and there are boxes labeled ELL Tips that give suggestions for the teacher that could aid in instruction. Parent communication is available in Spanish.

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Indicator 3r

2 / 2

Materials provide teachers with strategies to help sequence or scaffold lessons so that the content is accessible to all learners.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series meet the expectation that scaffolding or sequencing strategies are provided to teachers that allows the content to be accessed by all learners. Problems are often set up to engage students at multiple levels, including Investigation, Application and Extension sections with multiple representations and questioning. Content builds throughout the lessons and units to develop comprehension. Most prominent is the use of a logical sequence of questions within context to note patterns and to help students generate solutions, for example, Lesson 2 in Unit 2, Course 3.

Indicator 3s

1 / 2

Materials provide teachers with strategies for meeting the needs of a range of learners.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series partially meet the expectation that the materials provide teachers with strategies for meeting the needs of a range of learners. Specific strategies or materials for helping teachers implement differentiated instruction for a range of learners are limited to a brief section in the Overview of each course (page xii in Course 3) and some boxes labeled Differentiation placed at different points in the courses, for example page T202 in Course 1, page T78 in Course 2 and page T58A in Course 3. There is sufficient scaffolding provided for students to obtain new knowledge when they have the prerequisite knowledge for their current course, but the instructional materials do not provide sufficient scaffolding support for teachers to address the needs of students whose mathematical knowledge is not at their current course level. Also, complex vocabulary is used within the materials and may not be accessible to all learners, and there is limited aid provided for teachers on this issue within some of the Differentiation boxes, for example, page T216 in Course 1.

Indicator 3t

2 / 2

Materials embed tasks with multiple entry-points that can be solved using a variety of solution strategies or representations.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series meet the expectation that the materials provide problems with multiple entry-points that can be solved through a variety of strategies or representations. Questioning can be tiered with multiple entry points sequenced for logical reasoning and content development, for example, page T252 in Course 2. Most of the multiple step questions require a majority, if not all, of the MPs, but questions can also be specific with one solution and a single entry point. As a whole, content is experienced through a variety of mathematical representations with equations, graphs, diagrams, tables, charts, and verbal explanations consistently throughout the materials, for example, Investigation 1 in Course 1, Unit 5, Lesson 1.

Indicator 3u

1 / 2

Materials provide support, accommodations, and modifications for English Language Learners and other special populations that will support their regular and active participation in learning mathematics (e.g., modifying vocabulary words within word problems).

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series partially meet the expectation for providing support, accommodations, and modifications for English Language Learners and other special populations that will support their regular and active participation in learning mathematics (e.g., modifying vocabulary words within word problems). Beyond ELL, there was no support found for special populations such as students not reading at grade level. There is a Spanish Glossary in each student textbook, and there are boxes labeled ELL Tips that give suggestions for the teacher that could aid in instruction. The location of these boxes can be found in the Index of Mathematical Topics at the back of each teacher edition.

Indicator 3v

2 / 2

Materials provide support for advanced students to investigate mathematics content at greater depth.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series meet the expectation for providing support for advanced students to investigate mathematics content at greater depth. The Implementation Guide, on page 2, states; “Differences in student performance and interest can be accommodated by the depth and level of abstraction to which core topics are pursued, by the nature and degree of difficulty of applications, and by providing opportunities for student choice of homework tasks and projects.” The extensions tasks, included in the On Your Own section of each lesson, reveal how well students are able to extend the present content beyond the level addressed in the investigations. Teachers can pick and choose assignment problems for students to meet their level of understanding or sophistication.

The teacher edition Unit Overview contains notes of what types of enrichment are available within the lessons (Course 1, Unit 6, page T361; Course 2, Unit 1, page T1D; and Course 3, Unit 3, page T161A, paragraph 4). Within the lessons, there are Differentiation boxes that supply additional enrichment ideas. (Course 1, Unit 6, page T421; Course 2, Unit 7 page 507; and Course 3, Unit 2, page T116B). A complete list of differentiation boxes can be found in the Index of Mathematical Topics at the back of each teacher edition.

Indicator 3w

Narrative Only

Materials provide a balanced portrayal of various demographic and personal characteristics.

The few pictures that do contain people show a variety of race, ethnic, and personal characteristics. Examples include Course 1, pages 324, 356, 442 and 579; Course 2, pages 1, 49, 98, 353, 363 and 421; and Course 3, pages 74, 171, 216, 230 and 327. The wording of problems in the exercises uses a variety of names and cultural references.

Indicator 3x

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Materials provide opportunities for teachers to use a variety of grouping strategies.

The instructional materials provide opportunities for teachers to use a variety of grouping strategies. The Implementation Guide provides an entire section (pages 41 – 45) related to the pedagogy of collaborative learning, how to form and manage groups, and some effective techniques that can be used. There are also grouping suggestions throughout the teacher edition and boxes labeled Collaboration Skill that contain suggestions for group work. The location of these boxes can be found in the Index of Mathematical Topics at the back of each teacher edition.

Indicator 3y

Narrative Only

Materials encourage teachers to draw upon home language and culture to facilitate learning.

The instructional materials reviewed encourage teachers to draw upon home language and culture to facilitate learning. There is a reference in the Implementation Guide on page 53 to practices that promote equity for ELL students. There is a note on page 43 to make sure that groups are ethnically mixed, and there is also a reference on page 52 that, when wanted, students should be allowed to restate problems in their native language.

Criterion 3.5: Technology Use

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Effective technology use: Materials support effective use of technology to enhance student learning. Digital materials are accessible and available in multiple platforms.

The instructional materials reviewed for the Core-Plus Mathematics integrated series support effective use of technology to enhance student learning. Digital materials are accessible and available in multiple platforms. The materials provide access to many e-tools through ConnectEd. Additionally, the technological tools provided allow teachers to create their own assessments as well as collaborate with other teachers and their students through different features within the materials.

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Indicator 3aa

Narrative Only

Digital materials (either included as supplementary to a textbook or as part of a digital curriculum) are web-based and compatible with multiple internet browsers (e.g., Internet Explorer, Firefox, Google Chrome, etc.). In addition, materials are "platform neutral" (i.e., are compatible with multiple operating systems such as Windows and Mac and are not proprietary to any single platform) and allow the use of tablets and mobile devices.

The digital resources are accessible on Windows, Mac and Linux OS and require Java in order to run on those systems. CPMP Tools are built using Java WebStart, which permits safe, easy, and reliable distribution of software and software updates across different types of computers, but cellphones and tablets, excluding the Surface Pro, do not support Java in a way that will allow CPMP Tools to run.

Indicator 3ab

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Materials include opportunities to assess student mathematical understandings and knowledge of procedural skills using technology.

The materials include opportunities to assess student mathematical understandings and knowledge of procedural skills using technology. Teachers have access to the eAssessments through ConnectED, which is the online access to the instructional materials. Teachers can use pre-made tests or create tests from question banks (both pre-existing and teacher created) and can either print the assessments or assign them digitally for students to access and complete in ConnectED. Teachers have the ability to edit the number of times students may work on the assessment online, how long they can access it, when they can access it, and can choose to scramble questions. The assessments are not adaptive, but assessment questions can be selected by type of question and standard in order to elicit the type of response a teacher is looking for, conceptual or procedural fluency. Additionally, teachers can create their own assessment questions, including incorporating interactive elements using HTML5 or Flash technology in order for a teacher to better build questions to assess the type of understanding they are seeking.

Indicator 3ac

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Materials can be easily customized for individual learners.

Indicator 3ac.i

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Digital materials include opportunities for teachers to personalize learning for all students, using adaptive or other technological innovations.

The materials in the series do not provide adaptive technology. Individualization of assignments and assessments would have to be done by the teacher using the eAssessments tools.

Indicator 3ac.ii

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Materials can be easily customized for local use. For example, materials may provide a range of lessons to draw from on a topic.

The digital materials are not able to be customized to match student/community interest.

Indicator 3ad

Narrative Only

Materials include or reference technology that provides opportunities for teachers and/or students to collaborate with each other (e.g. websites, discussion groups, webinars, etc.).

The materials allow students and teachers to collaborate with one another through both messaging and discussion features. Teachers can collaborate with one another through sharing courses and materials.

Indicator 3z

Narrative Only

Materials integrate technology such as interactive tools, virtual manipulatives/objects, and/or dynamic mathematics software in ways that engage students in the Mathematical Practices.

The materials integrate technology, manipulatives, and dynamic software in ways that engage all students in the MPs. In addition to providing suggestions for how to use calculators and spreadsheets within the curriculum, the materials provide their own software, CPMP Tools, which has the capabilities of modeling geometry, algebra, statistics and discrete mathematics. CPMP Tools is used throughout the texts to engage students in a variety of ways including:

  • In Course 1, Unit 3, Lesson 1, Applications link directly to data located in CPMP Tools. Students can then use the software to plot the data and find a linear model. Alternatively, students can use their graphing calculator and enter the data in lists, produce a scatterplot, and find a model using the linear regression function already present in their graphing calculator.
  • In Course 2, Graphing Technology Lab, the Glencoe Personal Tutor presents a teacher explaining a step-by-step solution to a problem that includes a linear-quadratic system of equations.
  • In Course 3, Unit 3, Composing Size Transformations provides students with opportunities to work with the interactive geometry software in CPMP Tools.