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Kosko, K; Caniglia, J; Courtney, S; Zolfaghari, M; Morris, G (Ed.)Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 7, 2025
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Kosko, K; Caniglia, J; Courtney, S; Zolfaghari, M; Morris, G (Ed.)Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 7, 2025
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Kosko, K; Caniglia, J; Courtney, S; Zolfaghari, M; Morris, G (Ed.)Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 7, 2025
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Lischka, A. E.; Dyer, E. B.; Jones, R. S.; Lovett, J. N.; Strayer, J.; Drown, S. (Ed.)
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Lischka, A. E.; Dyer, E. B.; Jones, R. S.; Lovett, J. N.; Strayer, J.; Drown, S. (Ed.)
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Lischka, A. E.; Dyer, E. B.; Jones, R. S.; Lovett, J. N.; Strayer, J.; Drown, S. (Ed.)
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Flipped instruction is being implemented in an increasing number of mathematics classes but the research base is not yet well developed. Many studies of flipped instruction involve a small number of flipped classes being compared to non-flipped classes, but this methodology fails to account for variations in implementations. To aid in the systematic attention to variation, this article presents a framework for flipped mathematics instruction that identifies key features of the videos assigned as homework as well as features of the in-class activities. The components of the framework are accompanied by proposed quality indicators to further distinguish between flipped implementations that are structurally similar but different in enactmentmore » « less
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