1995
DOI: 10.2307/1176887
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Content as Context: The Role of School Subjects in Secondary School Teaching

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Cited by 87 publications
(81 citation statements)
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“…Research that broadly addresses teachers' attitudes toward different subject areas may help to explain why such a difference exists. According to a survey of subject area teachers conducted by Grossman and Stodolsky (1995), mathematics teachers, when compared to foreign language, English, science, and social studies teachers, most strongly agreed that instruction was effective when students were grouped by ability. Perhaps the significant findings that social perceptions are related to mathematics nominations reflect that the students in question may not have the social support necessary to fit into groups challenged with more advanced work.…”
Section: Teacher Nominationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Research that broadly addresses teachers' attitudes toward different subject areas may help to explain why such a difference exists. According to a survey of subject area teachers conducted by Grossman and Stodolsky (1995), mathematics teachers, when compared to foreign language, English, science, and social studies teachers, most strongly agreed that instruction was effective when students were grouped by ability. Perhaps the significant findings that social perceptions are related to mathematics nominations reflect that the students in question may not have the social support necessary to fit into groups challenged with more advanced work.…”
Section: Teacher Nominationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Perhaps the significant findings that social perceptions are related to mathematics nominations reflect that the students in question may not have the social support necessary to fit into groups challenged with more advanced work. This consideration of content as context, an idea set forth in several pieces of research conducted by Grossman and Stodolsky (Grossman & Stodolsky, 1995;Stodolsky & Grossman, 2000), should be examined to understand how students come to be identified as high achieving in different subject areas. Connecting back to Gagné's frame, it would expand the consideration of subject area as a characteristic of the context in which a specific talent develops.…”
Section: Teacher Nominationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, we know little from recent studies about whether and to what extent organic management has positive effects on teaching and learning in elementary schools. In addition, little research has compared the possible effects of organic management on teacher or student outcomes across different academic subjects, even though a great deal of current research shows that teachers' knowledge, task activities, and methods of resolving technical uncertainties vary greatly depending on the subject matter being taught (Grossman & Stodolsky, 1995;Rowan, 2002a;Spillane & Burch, in press).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, teachers may hold certain orientations toward teaching partly because of their training and exposure to the beliefs of others in their subject field outside of the school (Grossman & Stodolsky, 1995). Thus, these beliefs are partly institutionalized in the subject matter.…”
Section: A General Framework Of Social Contexts In Schoolsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As teachers develop understandings of subject matter and expectations for learning, they too encounter institutionalized aspects of schooling that are defined beyond the walls of the school. For example, teachers' approaches to teaching are affected by the subject they teach (Bidwell, Frank, & Quiroz, 1997;Grossman & Stodolsky, 1995), the sector in which they teach (Bryk, Lee, & Holland, 1993), and the values and norms associated with the socioeconomic status of the students they teach (Metz, 1990).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%