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Suggested Citation:"Appendix 3: Aspects and Categories in the TIMSS Mathematics and Science Analytic Frameworks." National Research Council. 1996. Mathematics and Science Education Around the World: What Can We Learn From The Survey of Mathematics and Science Opportunities (SMSO) and the Third International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS)?. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/5508.
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Appendix 3:
Aspects and Categories in the TIMSS Mathematics and Science Analytic Frameworks

Aspects And Major Categories Of Mathematics And Science Frameworks

Content Aspects

Mathematics

Science

• Numbers

• Earth sciences

• Measurement

• Life Sciences

• Geometry: Position

• Physical sciences

• Geometry: Symmetry

• Science, technology, and mathematics

• Proportionality

• History of science and technology

• Functions, relations, equations

• Environmental issues

• Data probability, statistics

• Nature of science

• Elementary analysis

• Science and other disciplines

• Validation and structure

 

• Other content

 

Performance Expectations Aspects

Mathematics

Science

• Knowing

• Understanding

• Using routine procedures

• Theorizing, analyzing, solving problems

• Investigating and problem solving

• Using tools, routine procedures

• Mathematical reasoning

• Investigating the natural world

• Proportionality

• Communicating

• Communicating

 

Perspective Aspects

Mathematics

Science

• Attitudes

• Attitudes

• Careers

• Careers

• Participation

• Participation

• Increasing interest

• Increasing interest

• Habits of mind

• Safety

 

• Habits of mind

From Curriculum Frameworks for Mathematics and Science (p. 46), by D.F. Robitaille et al., 1993, TIMSS Monograph No. 1. Vancouver: Pacific Educational Press. Copyright © 1993 TIMSS. Adapted with permission.

See Appendix 4 for data release plans.

Suggested Citation:"Appendix 3: Aspects and Categories in the TIMSS Mathematics and Science Analytic Frameworks." National Research Council. 1996. Mathematics and Science Education Around the World: What Can We Learn From The Survey of Mathematics and Science Opportunities (SMSO) and the Third International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS)?. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/5508.
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Page 21
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Mathematics and Science Education Around the World: What Can We Learn From The Survey of Mathematics and Science Opportunities (SMSO) and the Third International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS)? Get This Book
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Amid current efforts to improve mathematics and science education in the United States, people often ask how these subjects are organized and taught in other countries. They hear repeatedly that other countries produce higher student achievement. Teachers and parents wonder about the answers to questions like these: Why do the children in Asian cultures seem to be so good at science and mathematics? How are biology and physics taught in the French curriculum? What are textbooks like elsewhere, and how much latitude do teachers have in the way they follow the texts? Do all students receive the same education, or are they grouped by ability or perceived educational promise? If students are grouped, how early is this done? What are tests like, and what are the consequences for students? Are other countries engaged in Standards-like reforms? Does anything like "standards" play a role in other countries? Questions such as these reflect more than a casual interest in other countries' educational practices. They grow out of an interest in identifying ways to improve mathematics and science education in the United States.

The focus of this short report is on what the Third International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS), a major international investigation of curriculum, instruction, and learning in mathematics and science, will be able to contribute to understandings of mathematics and science education around the world as well as to current efforts to improve student learning, particularly in the United States.

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