Abstract
This paper provides a progress report of a four-year project which began in August 1992 and focuses on preparing specialist teachers in the provision of long-term, individualised, mathematics teaching programs for low-attaining first-graders (6-or 7year-olds). The meaning of 'recovery education' is outlined as are theoretical bases and earlier research studies relevant to the current project. Using afive-stage model of early arithmetical learning, the progress of 24 participants in 1992 and 32 in 1993 is summarised and compared with that of counterparts, who like the participants, were initially prenumerical. The participants underwent eight-week teaching cycles consisting of 30-minutes of individualised teaching, four mornings per week. In both 1992 and 1993, almost all of the participants made major progress and overall, the progress of participants notably exceeded that of their counterparts. A planned implementation of the Mathematics Recovery program in the United States in 1995 is also outlined.
Robert Wright, Margaret Cowper, Ann Stafford, Garry Stanger, Rita Stewart
THE MATHEMATICS RECOVERY PROJECT — A PROGRESS REPORT: SPECIALIST TEACHERS WORKING WITH LOW-ATTAINING FIRST-GRADERS