Hidden disparities: How courses and curricula shape opportunities in mathematics during high school

Citation

Schiller, K.S.; Schmidt, W.H.; Muller, C.; & Houang, R. (2010). Hidden disparities: How courses and curricula shape opportunities in mathematics during high school. Equity Excell Educ. vol. 43 (4) pp. 414-433 , PMCID: PMC3612550

Abstract

Efforts to promote academic achievement by increasing access to courses, especially in mathematics, may mask educational disparities if variations in curriculum are not also monitored. A multi-dimensional description of students’ mathematics curricula during high school was obtained from analyses of surveys, transcripts, and textbooks collected for a nationally representative study of adolescents during the mid-1990s. Few gaps in the number of years or credits in mathematics coursework were found. However, the quantity and cognitive challenge of instructional materials in textbooks adopted for those courses differed significantly both across and within mathematics tracks. Differences in the quality of curriculum accumulating during high school were also related to parents’ education level. Reducing such gaps in learning opportunities would require teachers to supplement adopted instructional materials to ensure that all students receive a high quality mathematics curriculum.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10665684.2010.517062

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Equity Excell Educ

Author(s)

Schiller, K.S.
Schmidt, W.H.
Muller, C.
Houang, R.

Year Published

2010

Volume Number

43

Issue Number

4

Pages

414-433

DOI

10.1080/10665684.2010.517062

PMCID

PMC3612550

NIHMSID

NIHMS242746

Reference ID

4461