Publication | Closed Access
Teaching Rate of Change and Problem Solving to High School Students With High Incidence Disabilities at Tier 3
15
Citations
24
References
2019
Year
Educational WritingMathematics CognitionDisabilityEducationTier 3Instructional ModelsLearning Disability AssessmentTeacher EducationMathematics EducationExceptional ChildrenInclusive EducationMathematical CognitionIntegrated SequenceExceptional ChildSpecific Learning DisorderHigh Incidence DisabilitiesExplicit Instructional StrategyLearning SciencesClassroom InstructionAccessible EducationRehabilitationInstructionSecondary EducationProblem SolvingSpecial EducationMathematics ConceptsSecondary Mathematics EducationMathematics Teacher Education
Implementing an integrated sequence of concrete-representational-abstract depictions of mathematics concepts (CRA-I) can improve the mathematics achievement of students with disabilities, and explicit instructional strategies involving problem-solving heuristics and student verbalizations can help facilitate students’ conceptual understanding of mathematics. Combining CRA-I and explicit instructional strategies may increase students’ conceptual understanding and ability to express mathematical reasoning through writing. This study included three ninth-grade students with disabilities, and employed a multiple-probe design across-participants to investigate a functional relation between an explicit instructional strategy within a CRA-I framework and high school students’ with disabilities proficiency in solving rate of change problems. Results showed that all three students improved their mathematics scores (combined Tau- U effect size = 0.77, p < .001) and maintained improvements during a 1- to 7-week post-instruction phase. Implications for research and practice related to mathematics instruction and intervention specifically for students with learning disabilities are discussed.
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