Skip to main content

Pinterest Curation and Student Achievement: The Effects of Elementary Mathematics Resources on Students’ Learning over Time

Item

Title
Pinterest Curation and Student Achievement: The Effects of Elementary Mathematics Resources on Students’ Learning over Time
Abstract/Description
In an era of social media, and amid the coronavirus pandemic, teachers’ curation of instructional resources stands as an opportunity to observe teachers’ planning and conceptualization of their practice in real time. This work explores the resources teachers curate, their rigor, and the effects on students’ learning across years. Merging big data from Pinterest, a prominent social media platform, and administrative data from the Indiana Department of Education on 10,383 fourth- through sixth-grade students across 2010–2017, this study employed three-level hierarchical linear models to identify relationships between the inherent cognitive rigor in teachers’ curated instructional tasks and students’ achievement. Results indicate teachers curating resources focused on basic memorization and remembering negatively affected students’ learning, whereas higher-level tasks focused on understanding and applying had a positive impact on achievement. Identified effects were comparable to those related to student and teacher attributes, signaling the importance of teachers’ curation.
Date
2021
In publication
The Elementary School Journal
Volume
122
Issue
1
Pages
57-85
Resource type
en
Resource status/form
en
Scholarship genre
en
Open access/full-text available
en No
Peer reviewed
en Yes
ISSN
0013-5984
Citation
Torphy Knake, K. T., Chen, Z., Yang, X., & Tait, J. (2021). Pinterest Curation and Student Achievement: The Effects of Elementary Mathematics Resources on Students’ Learning over Time. The Elementary School Journal, 122(1), 57–85. https://doi.org/10.1086/715480

Export

Comments

No comment yet! Be the first to add one!

I agree with terms of use and I accept to free my contribution under the licence CC BY-SA.

New Tags

I agree with terms of use and I accept to free my contribution under the licence CC BY-SA.