Con­necti­cut School Dis­trict Slows Down Its Math Cur­ricu­lum and Its Stu­dents Learn More

Here’s an inter­est­ing story from this week’s New York Times about how the high-performing West­port, Con­necti­cut, school dis­trict has cre­ated its own math mate­ri­als and slowed down its cur­ricu­lum, result­ing in stu­dents who ulti­mately learn and under­stand more.

Math stu­dents in this high-performing school dis­trict used to rush through their Alge­bra I text­books only to spend the first few months of Alge­bra II relearn­ing every­thing they for­got or failed to grasp the first time.

So the district’s frus­trated math teach­ers decided to rewrite the alge­bra cur­ricu­lum, lim­it­ing it to about half of the 90 con­cepts typ­i­cally cov­ered in a high school course in hopes of devel­op­ing a deeper under­stand­ing of key top­ics. Last year, they began replac­ing 1,000-plus-page math text­books with their own custom-designed online cur­ricu­lum; the lessons are typ­i­cally writ­ten in West­port and then sent to a pro­gram in India, called Hey­Math!, to jazz up the algo­rithms and prob­lem sets with ani­ma­tion and sounds.

Read the story here.

Leave a comment on “Con­necti­cut School Dis­trict Slows Down Its Math Cur­ricu­lum and Its Stu­dents Learn More”

Your Info (optional)




Comment (required)

Message