Kay A. Wohlhuter, Professor, Department of Education, University of Minnesota
I recommend this book for publication. The first reason is because of the content of the book. The author is providing relevant information that provides knowledge, should generate conversation between stakeholders, and should prompt action in response to the conversations about developing mathematical reasoners in elementary classrooms while meeting the demands of curriculums and mandated tests. Accountability is important, but it should not occur at the expense of developing mathematical problem solvers. There needs to be a way to do both, and I think this book addresses that challenge. A related reason involves the fact that the author does take into consideration all of the stakeholders. Teachers, administrators, parents, school board members, and legislators could all learn from this book. Although elementary children will not be reading this book, their role in the elementary mathematics classroom is central to the book's discussion. Additional support for my recommendation is because of the author's use of questions generated from her teaching and professional work to frame the discussion. This structure enables the readers to see that the information presented in the book is reality-based. The use of teacher action research studies also lends credibility to the classroom reality-based information.
Linda Dacey, Professor, Department of Education, Lessly University
I think the author is addressing a powerful concern in a creative manner. The idea that the teacher still has freedom in peripheral spaces is interesting and allows one to view the problem of test-only focus from a new perspective. . . The table of contents is strong. Teachers will be interested in the many practical suggestions that I would expect to be included under these headings.
Thomas Biggs, Elementary Math Specialist for grades K - 5
The strengths of this book are simple and straightforward. A book which is practical, useful, contemporary, and relevant to the market of preservice teachers and mathematics methods course students (both undergraduate and graduate levels).I am unaware of any other textbook which directly addresses or refers to the topics which are brought up in this text. This book is a publishable and useful text.