Transcript

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

Advisory Committee on Mathematics Education (ACME)Professor Alice Rogers

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

• Established in January 2002 by the Royal Society and the Joint Mathematical Council

• Supported by the Gatsby Foundation and the DCSF• ACME is an independent committee hosted at the RS• Chair as a ‘user of mathematics’• Past chairs: Sir Peter Williams, Professor Adrian Smith• Current chair: Professor Dame Julia Higgins

About ACME

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

The Aim of ACME

• to enable an effective and constructive partnership between Government and the mathematics community

• to inform and advise the DCSF and BIS in order to assist in its drive to raise standards and promote mathematics at all levels within education

• Also provides advice to government agencies and other key stakeholders (e.g. QCDA, Ofqual, TDA etc)

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

Membership

• Seven members of the committee:Jack Abramsky, Fiona Allan, Wendy Hoskin, Lynne McClure, Roger Porkess, Alice Rogers, Anne Watson

• Augmented by an ‘Outer Circle’, including further HE input

• Secretariat based at the Royal Society

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

The Big Issues in Mathematics Education

GCSE:• Twinned pair pilot September 2010:

Applications of Mathematics and Methods in Mathematics

• Early entry

• Two-tier

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

The Big Issues in Mathematics Education

Masters in Teaching and Learning (MTL)

• Lack of focus on improving subject knowledge

• Aimed at early-career teachers

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

Post-16 in 2016

Proactive work looking at pathways in maths. Review of 14-19 qualifications due in six years’ time.

• Origins in the Smith report – appropriate pathways for each learner

• Everyone should be expected to study appropriate mathematics post-16 – but A-level maths shouldn’t attempt to accommodate everyone

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

Post-16 in 2016 – discussion paper

• Baccalaureate-style model proposed – 6 subjects• Initial discussion paper suggested 3 mathematics pathways at Level 3

– consultation indicated a need for a pathway at Level 2 other than just repeating GCSE

• Need for opportunities to transfer between the pathways and flexibility within the system

• Concern about teacher supply and retention• Making the mathematics applicable and relevant to different subjects

will have a real implications in term of mathematics teachers’ knowledge – CPD will be crucial here

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

Post-16 now and in the near future

Use of Mathematics A-level: a key pathway

• Allows the target audience for Mathematics A-level to continue to include those who will wish to study mathematically rich STEM subjects in HE

• Broaden participation in mathematics, but taking the pressure off A-level Mathematics to accommodate – more than one tool is needed

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

Post-16 in 2016

Use of Mathematics A-level

• Possible risks? Students ill-advised?

• But how many reach HE social sciences, geography etc. and regret having studied no mathematics at all for two years?

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

A-level Mathematics

QCDA consultation summer 2009

• Strong agreement in some areas, lack of consensus elsewhere – student choice of modules versus uniformity of intake

• Proposals still being developed

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

Advanced Extension Award (AEA)

• AEA to be discontinued in 2013 – Mathematics is the only remaining AEA

• Introduction of A* grade for >90% on A2 papers with ‘stretch and challenge’ material

• ACME is pressing for retaining the AEA and developing it further – A* rewards greater accuracy not depth. CMS support

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

Mathematical Needs Project

• Two themes:

- Theme A: the Mathematical Needs of HE, business (‘Top down’)

- Theme B: the Mathematical Needs of the learners (‘Bottom up’)

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

Mathematical Needs Project

Theme A (Needs of HE, business)

• Research commissioned looking at: - Mathematical content of HE courses- Published entry requirements – likely recommendation

that depts should be honest about what is desirable

• Work informs pathways development

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

Input from HE

Input from HoDoMS is strongly encouraged

• Input from HE and others in curriculum development referred to by the DCSF/BIS Science and Learning Expert Group, Michael Gove, Sir Richard Sykes...

• HoDoMS has a valuable role to play

AdvisoryCommittee onMathematicsEducation

www.acme-uk.org

Discussion / Q&A


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