"The Math and Science Partnership Knowledge Management and Dissemination (MSP KMD)
project was funded as an MSP Research Evaluation and Technical Assistance effort to support
knowledge management within the Math and Science Partnership program and to disseminate
information to the broader mathematics and science education community. The overall goal of
the KMD project is to synthesize findings from MSP work and integrate them into the larger
knowledge base for education reform. In this way, MSPs (both NSF-funded and Department of
Education-funded) and the field at large can benefit from MSPs’ research and development
efforts.
The KMD project is conducting its work in a few important, carefully selected areas of
mathematics and science education research and practice. The project uses a three-stage
knowledge management model, created by Nevis, DiBella, and Gould (1995) for workplace
settings. The model posits that learning occurs in three identifiable stages: knowledge
acquisition, knowledge sharing, and knowledge utilization.
Deepening teachers’ content knowledge is the first area to be investigated. As part of the
knowledge acquisition phase for deepening teacher content knowledge, the project has identified
key theoretical perspectives; conducted a literature review; and reviewed MSP documents and
interviewed a number of MSP PIs and others to capture practice-based insights. These three
sources—theoretical perspectives, research-based findings, and practice-based insights—will be
integrated in syntheses that represent the field’s knowledcontribution of the MSP program to the knowledge base."


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