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OPPORTUNITY TO LEARN SECONDARY MATHS: A CURRICULUM APPROACH WITH TIMSS 2011 DATADr. Christian Bokhove

Southampton Education School

ICME-13, TSG-39

July 2016

Rationale• enGasia project, studying geometry education in

international perspective

• Differences in curriculum

• Existing international comparisons like TIMSS and PISA

• Recently published paper ‘Opportunity to Learn’ (Schmidt, Burroughs, Zoido, & Houang, 2015)

• Also plays large role in recent OECD report on maths: “Equations and Inequalities - Making Mathematics Accessible to All”

Opportunity to Learn• ‘Content covered’

• Relationship Socioeconomic status and achievement (e.g. Sirin, 2005; Chudgar & Luschei, 2009)

• One factor: role of curriculum, exposure to curriculum content.

• Opportunity to learn (OTL; Carroll, 1963), content coverage

Schmidt, Burroughs, Zoido & Houang (2015)• Role of schooling in perpetuating

educational inequality

• PISA 2012 data

• Opportunity to Learn

• “instructional content as a mediator for socioeconomic inequality”

• Student level indicators?

• Key question what is involved in OTL? Surely the teacher/classroom level is important?

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Dynamic model• Educational outcomes are influenced by

variables at the student level, the classroom level, the school level and national/regional level. Dynamic model (Creemers & Kyriakides, 2008).

• ‘Management of time’ at teacher/classroom level one of the most significant factors of effectiveness.

• OTL specifically:

– national/regional level (e.g. national curriculum),

– classroom (content covered by teacher)

– and to a lesser extent school level.

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So a curriculum approach• Do students know best what contents is covered?

• And if they do, then isn’t that more a proxy for achievement?

• With content covered, teachers perhaps know best?

• TIMSS more curriculum oriented than PISA (Rindermann & Baumeister, 2015)

• TIMSS samples classrooms

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TIMSS 2011“TIMSS 2011 is the fifth in IEA’s series of international assessments of student achievement dedicated to improving teaching and learning in mathematics and science. First conducted in 1995, TIMSS reports every four years on the achievement of fourth and eighth grade students.“

http://timssandpirls.bc.edu/timss2011/

Curriculum model• TIMSS’ curriculum model (Mullis, Martin,

Ruddock, O’Sullivan, & Preuschoff, 2009)

– intended curriculum (the educational system's aims and goals)

– implemented curriculum (the actual strategies, practices, and activities found in classrooms)

– attained curriculum (student learning)

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Multilevel: students in classrooms in countries

Methodology: analytical approach• Secondary data analysis of TIMSS 2011 data

• Use multilevel models

• Take into account complex sampling design of TIMSS 2011

– Different probabilities of units being selected (classrooms, students) → sampling weights

– Rotated-booklet design → Plausible Values combined by Rubin’s rules (Rubin, 1987).

– No jackknife for correct SE measurement → multilevel approach should cater for this

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Methodology: analytical approach• IDB analyser used to create datasets for three levels

• HLM 6.08 used to build four models

– A null model– A model with SES variables– A model with OTL variables– A model with both SES and OTL variables

• Further assumptions

– Group-centered variables at student and classroom levels– Grand mean centered at country level– Full Maximum Likelihood– Missing data imputed with EM algorithm

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Dataset• TIMSS 2011 grade 8 data

• Data at three levels

– achievement and background data of students, – classroom level data from the teacher questionnaire,

and – curriculum data at the country level.

• After data preparation: 287395 students in 11688 classrooms in 50 countries.

• Choice of variables

Dependent variable• Five plausible values for maths achievement,

BSMMAT01 to BSMMAT05

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Independent variables: student level• ‘Home Economic Resources’

– Proxy for SES (and related to prior knowledge)– Numbers of books at home, highest level

education of either parent, number of home study support

– One scale through IRT scaling (Rasch partial credit model)

• No OTL measure at student level for reasons explained previously.

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Independent variables: class level• Mean SES in a class → Classroom SES

• Two newly created OTL measures → Classroom OTL

– classOTL1: Percentage of the content domain covered with students

– classOTL2: Percentage+ Maths instruction time, expressed in variable between 0 and 2 of content coverage

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Independent variables: country level• Mean SES in a country → Country SES

• 3 newly created OTL measures → Country OTL

– countryOTL1: combination of

• Is there a national curriculum?•Does curriculum prescribe goals and objectives?•Curriculum coverage (content domains: number,

algebra, geometry and data and chance)•Variable between 0 and 3 content coverage

– countryOTL2: mean of all classOTL1– countryOTL3: only curriculum coverage

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Models

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Conclusions• SES variables reduce classroom and country variance,

OTL variables too, but less

• SES variables significant positive predictors

• OTL significant positive predictors at classroom level, at country level depends on operationalisation of OTL

• But after controlling for SES all models classroom OTL significantly positive predictor, country OTL not.

• ContradictsWhy?

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Discussion/further analyses• Content domains: number, algebra, geometry and

data and chance.

• Sampling classrooms

• Different correlations between the different operationalisations of OTL, for example:

Thank you• Questions/comments?

• More information:

Twitter: @cbokhove

C.Bokhove@soton.ac.uk

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Selected referencesCarroll, J.B. (1963). A model of school learning. Teachers College Record, 64(8), 723-733.

Chudgar, A. & Luschei, T.F. (2009). National income, income inequality, and the importance of schools: A hierarchical cross-national comparison. American Educational Research Journal, 46(3), 626-658.

Creemers, B.P.M. & Kyriakides, L. (2008). The dynamics of educational effectiveness: a contribution to policy, practice and theory in contemporary schools. London: Routledge.

Mullis, I.V.S., Martin, M.O., Ruddock, G.J., O’Sullivan, C.Y., & Preuschoff, C. (2009). TIMSS 2011 Assessment frameworks. Lynch School of Education, Boston College.

Mullis, I.V.S., Martin, M.O., Foy, P., & Arora, A. (2012). TIMSS 2011 International results in mathematics. Lynch School of Education, Boston College.

Rindermannm H, & Baumeister, A.E.E. (2015). Validating the interpretations of PISA and TIMSS tasks: A rating study. International Journal of Testing, 15(1), 1-22.

Rubin, D. (1987). Multiple imputation for nonresponse in sample surveys. New York: John Wiley.

Rutkowski, L., Gonzalez, E., Joncas, M., & von Davier, M. (2010). International large-scale assessment data: Issues in secondary analysis and reporting. Educational Researcher, 39(2), 142-151.

Schmidt, W.H., Zoido, P., & Cogan, L.S. (2013). Schooling matters: Opportunity to learn in PISA 2012 (OECD Education Working Papers No. 95). Paris, France: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.

Schmidt, W.H., Burroughs, N.A., Zoido, P., & Houang, R.T. (2015). Educational Researcher, 44(7), 371-386.

Sirin, S. R. (2005). Socioeconomic status and academic achievement: A meta-analytic review of research. Review of Educational Research, 75(3), 417–453.

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