All of the faculty in mathematics education are engaged in research and development activities that, collectively, aim to improve mathematics education in grades K-16. The following descriptions provide a brief overview of current or recent research projects.
Tonya Bartell, Assistant Professor in School of Education
Primary interest is equity in mathematics education, including confronting the racial achievement gap by examining issues of power, race, and access and their intersection with mathematics teaching and learning. Has investigated teachers learning to teach mathematics for social justice. Has examined teachers' conceptions of equity in mathematics education. Other interests include teacher professional development and the effects of such programs on student learning.
Dawn Berk, Assistant Professor in School of Education and Mathematics & Science Education Resource Center
Primary interest is investigating the design, implementation, and impact of professional development experiences for mathematics teachers. Has examined how middle school teachers interpret and interact with instructional policy documents like the NCTM Standards. Has also investigated the transitions students experience as they move between traditional and reform mathematics curricula. Other interests include pre-service teacher education and student learning of undergraduate mathematics.
Jinfa Cai, Professor in Department of Mathematical Sciences and School of Education
Primary interest is how middle and high school students learn mathematics and solve problems, and how teachers can design learning environments to help students make sense of mathematics. Has explored these questions within and across nations. Recently has focused on U.S. and Chinese students' mathematical thinking and the impact of instructional and cultural factors on students' learning. Currently is investigating U.S. and Chinese teachers' pedagogical representations and their impact on students' mathematical thinking.
Alfinio Flores, Hollowell Professor of Mathematics Education in Department of Mathematical Sciences
Primary interest is helping students and prospective and in service teachers develop their conceptual understanding of mathematics. He uses computers, calculators, and concrete materials to make mathematical abstractions more tangible and help students and teachers develop a network of connected mathematical concepts.
Brad Glass, Assistant Professor in School of Education and Mathematics & Science Education Resource Center
Primary interests include the development of teacher education programs and the use of various forms of technology in the learning and teaching of mathematics.
Laura Glass, Interim Associate Director of the School of Education, Assistant Professor in School of Education
Primary interests include teacher preparation and educational policy in the United States. Has examined elementary teachers' reflective thinking on a mathematics reform curriculum and investigated the use of children's mathematical thinking in mathematics content courses for pre-service elementary and middle school teachers.
James Hiebert, Professor in School of Education
Primary interest is improving school mathematics teaching. Has conducted a number of studies on elementary school students' classroom learning and recently collaborated on the interpretation of data from the Video Study of Teaching as part of the Third International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS). Currently is directing the code development and analysis of the mathematics portion of the TIMSS-Repeat Video Study.
Mary Ann Huntley, Assistant Professor in Department of Mathematical Sciences and School of Education
Primary interest involves investigating curricular influences on the teaching and learning of middle- and high-school mathematics. Has conducted cross-curricular studies on high-school students' understandings of algebra, and is currently studying middle-grades teachers' and students' algebra knowledge. Other interests include curricular influences on mathematics classroom practice.
Amanda Jansen, Assistant Professor in School of Education
Primary interest is the socio-emotional context of the mathematics classroom, including the development of adolescents' identities, dispositions, and motivations with respect to learning mathematics. Has examined seventh grade students' motivations to participate in whole-class discussions in classrooms that use NCTM Standards-based curricula. Has investigated students' transitions between traditional and reform mathematics curricula. Other interests include pre-service teachers' beliefs and dispositions and students' algebraic reasoning.
Jon Manon, Assistant Professor in School of Education and Director of Mathematics & Science Education Resource Center
Primary interest is in the implementation of exemplary mathematics curricular materials in Delaware's public schools. Director of an NSF-funded Local Systemic Change project (DEMCI) and a co-PI on a new video study in collaboration with Project 2061 of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and Texas A&M University on the fidelity of implementation of exemplary materials in the middle grades.
William Moody, Professor Emeritus in School of Education and Department of Mathematical Sciences
Primary interest centers on learning and teaching of mathematical concepts through problem solving situations in the middle grades. Has organized and administered the University of Delaware Solve It Mathematics program, which is designed to present mathematical concepts to children using a problem solving approach. Problems are continually developed for the program and students' solution strategies are studied.
Anne Morris, Associate Professor in School of Education
Primary interest is the development of logical and mathematical reasoning. Has conducted a number of studies on children's, adolescents', and college students' understandings of proof, logical argument and mathematical structure. Currently is investigating the development of children's reasoning in two exemplary elementary school mathematics programs.
Diana Wearne, Professor Emerita in School of Education
Primary interest is understanding how elementary and middle school students learn mathematics from classroom instruction. Has conducted a number of studies in Grades 1-8 on students' developing concepts and skills with whole numbers and with decimal fractions. Currently is directing an investigation of the mathematics content presented during the videotaped lessons in the TIMSS-Repeat Video Study.