Dr. Karen Karp is a Professor at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Education. For twenty-one years, she was a mathematics teacher educator at the University of Louisville in Kentucky, where she is now professor emeritus. She is a former member of the NCTM Board of Directors and a former president of the Association of Mathematics Teacher Educators. In addition to Karen’s background as a certified secondary mathematics teacher and elementary school teacher, she is a certified special education teacher. She continues to work in classrooms to support teachers of students with disabilities in their mathematics instruction. Karen is the author of more than 25 books including Elementary and Middle School Mathematics: Teaching Developmentally (with Van de Walle and Bay Williams); Essential Understanding of Addition and Subtraction in Practice - Pre-K-Grade 2 (with Caldwell and Kobett) and numerous book chapters and articles. Her three articles on “Rules that Expire” (co-authored with Bush and Dougherty) have appeared in each of the NCTM journals for teachers.
Learning Opportunities
Improving Mathematics Instruction for Students Who Struggle: Multi-Tiered Systems of Support, Grades 1-5
Presented By
Karen KarpSession Details
| Date | Time |
|---|---|
| February 13, 2019 | 9:00 am to 3:30 pm |
Location
Grade Levels
AllThis all-day institute focuses on adapting classroom instruction for a diverse group of learners in grades 1-5 who struggle with mathematics.
Using evidence-based strategies such as concrete/semi-concrete/
You will also experience classroom-tested tasks that create robust learning and avoid the “teaching as telling” approach. An emphasis will be on building from students’ strengths and avoiding “rules that expire.”
Watch Karen in action - Keynote: What to Teach in Mathematics Intervention
Target Audience
Grades 1-5 Teachers, Math Consultants
Also Recommended For
Instructional Coaches, Learning Coaches, Inclusive Learning Teachers