Chapter 1: The Learning Framework in Number for the Classroom
Chapter 2: Professional Principles and Practices
Chapter 3: Good Instruction for All Students
Chapter 4: Numeracy and Functional Mathematics
Chapter 5: Assessing Students with Disabilities
Chapter 6: Using the Learning Framework in Number to Write
Individualized Education Programs
Chapter 7: Brain Research: Implications for Teaching and Learning
Mathematics
Chapter 8: Dyscalculia
Chapter 9: Differentiating Instruction
Chapter 10: Teaching Students with Disabilities
Chapter 11: The Constructivist as Teacher
Chapter 12: Supporting Students with Other Special Needs
Dr. Pamela D. Tabor holds a Bachelor of Science degree in
elementary education and Bible from Kentucky Christian University,
a Master of Arts degree in elementary education from East Tennessee
State University, and a Doctor of Philosophy in mathematics
education from Southern Cross University. Her supervisor was Robert
J. Wright, the developer of Mathematics Recovery. She has recently
worked as Research and Evaluation Specialist for the US Math
Recovery Council in which she has had the pleasure of working with
instructional leaders from districts around the US and
internationally to think deeply about the impact of Math Recovery
in their school contexts. Previously, she spent nearly two decades
as a school-based math specialist, interventionist and
instructional coach. In that capacity she worked with
administrators, teachers of mathematics, teachers of special
education, students, and parents to improve the quality of
mathematics instruction in a public elementary school in Maryland.
She is also a coauthor of the Math Recovery series book Developing
Number Knowledge, a contributor of Teaching Number in the Classroom
with 4—8 year Olds, one of the original developers of USMRC’s
Add+VantageMR Professional Development Courses, and one of the
developers of USMRC’s Student Numeracy Assessment Progressions
(SNAP).
Dawn Dibley, a special educator with thirty years of experience as
a music therapist, classroom teacher, and mathematics coach, is
currently an instructional coach for the US Math Recovery Council.
From the time of her initial training as a Math Recovery
Intervention Specialist in 2007, Dawn began exploring the use of
the LFIN in teaching numeracy to students with disabilities. She
spent several years facilitating the USMRC’s Add+VantageMR
Professional Development Courses to specifically address the
concerns of teachers of students with special needs. She holds a
Bachelor’s degree in Music Therapy and Master’s degrees in Music
Therapy and Developmental Cognitive Disabilities from the
University of Minnesota.
Dr. Amy J. Hackenberg taught mathematics to middle and high school
students for 9 years in L.A. and Chicago, prior to earning a Ph.D.
in mathematics education from the University of Georgia. Amy is
currently an associate professor of mathematics education at
Indiana University-Bloomington. She conducts research on how middle
school students construct fractions knowledge and algebraic
reasoning and on how teachers can learn to develop productive
student-teacher relationships. In her current project she is
investigating how to differentiate instruction for diverse middle
school students (see https://idream.sitehost.iu.edu/), studying her
own teaching as well as working with practicing teachers. She is
the proud co-author of the Math Recovery series book, Developing
Fractions Knowledge.
Dr. Anderson Norton is a professor in the Department of Mathematics
at Virginia Tech. His research focuses on building models of
students’ mathematical development. This work has generated
interdisciplinary collaborations with psychologists and
neuroscientists. Prior to this volume, Norton served as chair of
the steering committee for the North American Chapter of the
International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education,
co-editor on a pair of publications bridging psychology and
mathematics education, and co-author of the Math Recovery series
book, Developing Fractions Knowledge.
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