Continuing Mathematics Project

The Continuing Mathematics Project (CMP), published by Longman in the 1970s, was conceived as a response to the problem of insufficiently numerate students who were studying beyond '0' level. The Dainton Report recommended that " ... normally all pupils should study mathematics until they leave school ...". The provision of courses was problematic, partly because of the diverse needs of the students and partly because a critical shortage of mathematics teachers made it difficult to provide appropriate courses in many schools. This climate of concern coincided with the founding of a new government-funded organisation – the National Council for Educational Technology. Soon after it was established, the National Council held a conference to consider areas of the education system where it might promote and stimulate activity demonstrating the contribution of educational technology in the systematic development and evaluation of learning systems. Initially the Project was conceived to have quite a revolutionary structure with units, each containing a system of programmes and diagnostic tests, that would include audio-visual resources where appropriate. In addition, there would be accompanying materials for teachers, such as teacher manuals and films of the material in use. Teachers suggested independent learning materials might make a welcome contribution. The relative complexity of material involving texts, answer booklets, games, film-strips and tapes was immediately seen as a major problem by the specialists who identified the marketing difficulties which were likely to arise. Although some initial units had audiovisual materials, it was distilled into self learning booklets. These booklets were divided into three categories: (i) revision units (ii) introductory units (iii) sequences of units forming short courses.

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This resource from the Continuing Mathematics Project has three units covering probability. More Basic Rules of Probability is the third unit and covers events for which probabilities are calculated by multiplication. They are called AND events, it shows that they are composed of basic events which can either be...

For students to benefit from this Mathematics in Geography 4 unit from the Continuing Mathematics Project they should be familiar with simple ratios and square roots, and with algebraic symbolism and quadratic equations. A fair amount of arithmetic is involved in the unit.

The objectives of the unit are;...

Descriptive Statistics is the name the Continuing Mathematics Project has given to a sequence of four units which deal with distributions, histograms, bar charts, frequency tables and measures of central tendency and dispersion. The first unit, Presenting Statistics, aims to teach some basic statistical techniques...

This resource from the Continuing Mathematics project is made up of three units covering hypothesis testing.

The first unit covers the Wilcoxon Rank Sum Test and aims to teach the use of a non-parametric test for assessing the significance of the difference between two independent samples. In this context,...

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