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Does Anyone Know More Details About The CME Project?

I came across the CME project recently while reading through the comment thread over at Dan Meyer's place.

At first glance, this project looks very interesting:

CME Project is a four-year, NSF-funded, comprehensive high school mathematics program that is problem-based, student-centered, and organized around the familiar themes of Algebra 1, Geometry, Algebra 2, and Precalculus.

And further down the page:

CME Project standards-based mathematics curriculum and CME Project content-based professional development provided by EDC address the goals of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009.

Headscratcher

This looks awesome! A four year math curriculum, complete with professional development for teachers, and all developed with National Science Foundation and Recovery money from the US Government! I can't wait to see this curriculum! More importantly, I'm really excited to see how it can be remixed and reused and improved alongside other project-based learning exercises.

So I follow the link to Tables of Contents, and check out Algebra 2.

And there's just a text-based breakdown of the contents. No links. No actual problems. Just descriptions. Nothing that is actually useful.

And then I return to the home page, and read the second line:

The series was developed by the Center for Mathematics Education at Education Development Center, Inc. (EDC) in Newton, Massachusetts, and is published by Pearson Education, Inc.

Is it really possible that in 2010, curriculum that is developed using public money can only be accessed by buying it from a private entity? Can someone tell me what I'm missing here?

Does anyone know more details about this project? Will this curriculum and the accompanying professional development materials ever be released under an open license that permits reuse?

Image Credit: Photo "CreativeTools.se - PackshotCreator - Head scratcher" taken by Creative Tools, published under an Attribution license.

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