Parts of the Whole: Is Everything Equally Important?
Two strategies are proposed for sorting out priorities and goals in education. At the college level the column argues that goals, and therefore requirements, should be set based on the desired knowledge base of the entire population rather than the individual. At the scale of a single K-12 classroom...
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National Numeracy Network
2009-01-01
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Online Access: | http://dx.doi.org/10.5038/1936-4660.2.1.7 |
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doaj-415429a7539448d8af9f3e702cf963272020-11-24T22:21:25ZengNational Numeracy NetworkNumeracy1936-46602009-01-01217Parts of the Whole: Is Everything Equally Important?Dorothy WallaceTwo strategies are proposed for sorting out priorities and goals in education. At the college level the column argues that goals, and therefore requirements, should be set based on the desired knowledge base of the entire population rather than the individual. At the scale of a single K-12 classroom the column argues that priority be given to content requiring most instructor intervention, describing how the structure of class time and school activities would change as a result. Implementation of these strategies would lead to more efficient use of teacher’s time and effort, better allocation of systemic resources, and clarity of goals at the national level.http://dx.doi.org/10.5038/1936-4660.2.1.7numeracyquantitative literacyquantitative reasoningliteracypolicymanagementteacher educationelementary educationsecondary educationcurriculumpost-secondary education |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Dorothy Wallace |
spellingShingle |
Dorothy Wallace Parts of the Whole: Is Everything Equally Important? Numeracy numeracy quantitative literacy quantitative reasoning literacy policy management teacher education elementary education secondary education curriculum post-secondary education |
author_facet |
Dorothy Wallace |
author_sort |
Dorothy Wallace |
title |
Parts of the Whole: Is Everything Equally Important? |
title_short |
Parts of the Whole: Is Everything Equally Important? |
title_full |
Parts of the Whole: Is Everything Equally Important? |
title_fullStr |
Parts of the Whole: Is Everything Equally Important? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Parts of the Whole: Is Everything Equally Important? |
title_sort |
parts of the whole: is everything equally important? |
publisher |
National Numeracy Network |
series |
Numeracy |
issn |
1936-4660 |
publishDate |
2009-01-01 |
description |
Two strategies are proposed for sorting out priorities and goals in education. At the college level the column argues that goals, and therefore requirements, should be set based on the desired knowledge base of the entire population rather than the individual. At the scale of a single K-12 classroom the column argues that priority be given to content requiring most instructor intervention, describing how the structure of class time and school activities would change as a result. Implementation of these strategies would lead to more efficient use of teacher’s time and effort, better allocation of systemic resources, and clarity of goals at the national level. |
topic |
numeracy quantitative literacy quantitative reasoning literacy policy management teacher education elementary education secondary education curriculum post-secondary education |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.5038/1936-4660.2.1.7 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT dorothywallace partsofthewholeiseverythingequallyimportant |
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