Effectiveness:
Reviewed by University of California,
Berkeley for NCREL and Metiri Group (2000)
IMP was the subject of a five-year
evaluation by the Wisconsin Center for Education Research at the University
of Wisconsin. The evaluation looked at: "achievement, retention,
students' choice of courses following the program, differential effects
by ethnicity and gender, and teacher change." In two of the studies,
IMP students were found to have scored significantly higher on the mathematics
component of the PSAT or SAT than non-IMP students.
IMP students also did significantly
better on the statistics items from the Second International Mathematics
Study and on two problem-solving items developed by the state of Wisconsin.
This study was replicated in two high schools in different locales with
similar results. Yet another study found that IMP students' scores were
higher in 15 out of 20 Stanford Achievement Test (SAT-9) probability multiple-choice
categories.
A transcript analysis showed that
IMP students tended to take more mathematics classes and more semesters
of college-qualifying mathematics than students enrolled in a traditional
math sequence. Finally, IMP students also evidenced desirable attitudes
about mathematics and its application to daily life in comparison to their
peers.
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A five-year evaluation correlate
this learning approach to higher student performance. |