After a contentious road to approve a new set of statewide guidelines on teaching students math, California officials must still figure out how to support school districts with implementation.

The 2023 Math Framework, which the State Board of Education passed in July, is a 1,000-page document that details what many state and education officials accept as the best practices to teach mathematics. Although not everyone agreed and controversies arose during the four years of work it took to reach approval, math experts and organizations across the state are beginning to have conversations about what a statewide rollout could look like.

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(1) comment

Terence Y

Great article from EdSource… Although I didn’t realize there was any problem with “old” math. Seems to me that “old” math has pretty much brought on all the technological and scientific increases we see today. I do commend Ellen Barger lowering expectations by saying a rollout is an ongoing process of continuous improvement that could take the next six or seven years. Unfortunately, this isn’t fair to all the kids that will be the guinea pigs during these years learning “new” math which I’d say isn’t any better than “old” math. Of course, that’s just me. I’ve already gone through all the math I need, and then some.

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