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JMAP RESEARCH DATABASES FOR EXAMVIEW
From a collection of 1,534 extant Regents mathematics
examinations administered in between 1866 and 2009, every examination
administered from one year in each decade was used to create a representative
sample of the historical record of assessment practices in mathematics education
in the public schools of New York State. This representative sample of
historical Regents mathematics examination problems contains 5,508 mathematics
assessment problems associated with 204 Regents mathematics examinations
administered in calendar years 1866, 1870, 1880, ..., 2000 and 2009. The
problems from these 204 examinations were transcribed and entered into Exam View
databases, which were subsequently encoded with a topic for each problem, the
name of the curriculum each problem was used to assess and the date and month in
which each problem was administered to students. This methodology allows
reasonable inferences to be drawn about what topics were assessed within
different curriculums, when specific topics were assessed in different
curricula, and how mathematics assessment practices changed over a span of 14
decades. Quick reference can also be made to the digital images of the original
source documents, which are available through JMAP.
The database created from the research sample has been
organized and analyzed using three perspectives: 1) the first view is organized
chronologically, and presents the 5,508 problems in the research sample using the
chronological order in which the problems were administered to schoolchildren in
the public schools of New York; 2) the second view organizes the same problems
around curricula, and shows the various topics that were assessed in each
curricula; and 3) the third view organizes the problems by topics, and shows
when various mathematical topics were observed in the research sample and the
curricula with which each topic was associated. Collectively, these three
appendices represent primary source documents containing slightly different
illuminations of 144 years of mathematics assessment practices in the public
schools of New York.
This research sample was created as part of a
dissertation in
urban education at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, and
the taxonomy developed for classifying and sorting 144 years of Regents
mathematics problems is different than the taxonomy used elsewhere in JMAP for
organizing Regents problems relating to the current curricula. Educational
researchers and others are welcome to use and modify the research sample with
proper attributions. Exam View software is necessary to open the databanks.
PDF versions are also available.
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