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Teachers' and facilitators' views on grade 11 learners' approaches to solving context-based mathematics and mathematical literacy tasks.Machaba, France January 2014 (has links)
D. Tech. Education / This thesis emerges from an analysis of learners' responses to tasks presented to learners studying Mathematics and Mathematical Literacy in South Africa. Officially, Mathematics and Mathematical Literacy are two separate learning areas. Learners from Grade 10 onwards take either one or the other but not both. This means that there is a potential that by the time learners reach Grade 11, they would have acquired different kinds of knowledge and problem solving skills depending on which of these they take. Hence the study sought to investigate Grade 11 learners' approaches to solving context-based Mathematics and Mathematical Literacy tasks. The study was driven by the following key research questions: How do Mathematics learners interact with Mathematical Literacy tasks? How do Mathematical Literacy learners interact with Mathematics tasks? When given a Mathematics task, what variations, if any, exist in the solution strategies of Mathematical Literacy learners and vice versa? What are teachers and facilitators' views on Mathematics and Mathematical Literacy learners' solution strategies?
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Some perspectives on high school mathematics evaluationNorton, David A January 1982 (has links)
Includes bibliographies. / This paper seeks to introduce the taxonomy developed by Bloom and also other taxonomies applied to Mathematics. The behavioural basis is considered before the actual taxonomies are presented giving due cognizance to the influence of behavioural objectives. The paper then demonstrates the way in which a taxonomy can be used in setting examination papers, and also gives a survey of the way Bloom's taxonomy and behavioural objectives have been used in instruction. Philosophical criticisms of objectives and the use of Bloom are considered followed by a survey of empirical findings in connection with both of these. Finally suggestions are firstly made as to how the taxonomy be used to examine mathematics question papers in South Africa in its albeit subjective manner, and secondly for further research.
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Gender and performance in the mathematics' [sic] sections of the Illinois Standards Achievement Test and the Prairie State Achievement Exam /Leaf, Lindsey, January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Specialist in School Psychology)--Eastern Illinois University, 2009. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 42-45).
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Gender differences in mathematics achievement : an analysis of the 2003 Common Entrance Examinations in the Commonwealth of Dominica /Laidlow, Leandra D. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M. Ed.)--Ohio University, August, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 66-71).
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Gender differences in mathematics achievement an analysis of the 2003 Common Entrance Examinations in the Commonwealth of Dominica /Laidlow, Leandra D. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.Ed.)--Ohio University, August, 2004. / Title from PDF t.p. Includes bibliographical references (p. 66-71)
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A study of the difficulties experienced by engineering students in higher education with mathematics and related subjects and their relevance to the structure of mathematical abilityMorgan, A. T. January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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A comparison of equipercentile, linear and Rasch methods for equating tests in the international project for the evaluation of educational achievement in mathematics, Hong Kong /Cheung, Kwong-yuen, Thomas. January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (M. Ed.)--University of Hong Kong, 1982.
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Nonsymbolic numerical magnitude processing and arithmetic performance : an investigation on first-grade children with and without mathematics difficultiesTang, Wai-yan, Jacqueline, 鄧偉茵 January 2012 (has links)
This study examined the nonsymbolic numerical magnitude processing in Chinese first graders with marked mathematics difficulties (MD) and typically achieving peers. The approximate number system (ANS) view has suggested that children with MD may have deficit in the internal representation of magnitudes. Chinese first-graders with MD were compared with age-matched typically achieving children on approximate numerical comparison, approximate addition and multiplication tasks. Children with MD were found to perform significantly worse than their age-matched controls in all tasks. Students before formal instruction in multiplication yielded an above-chance level of performance in approximate multiplication task, which suggested the existence of approximate multiplicative ability. After formal instruction in multiplication, the MD group performed significantly worse than controls in approximate multiplication task and arithmetic tests. Only normally achieving children showed significant improvement after formal instruction. This study provided further evidence for an intuitive numerical processing in arithmetic operation, and the result had significant implication to the diagnosis of MD and intervention on mathematics difficulties. / published_or_final_version / Educational Psychology / Master / Master of Social Sciences
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Making sense of number : a study of children’s developing competenceKelleher, Heather 05 1900 (has links)
This study investigated young children's construction of meaning for number
and explored ways to more comprehensively assess and portray the
development of number sense in young children. Greeno's (1991)
conceptualization of number sense as situated knowing in a conceptual
domain was used to consider both the mathematical tools available to the
child and the extent to which the child makes use of these tools.
The data consisted of four videotaped interviews for each of sixteen children
between the ages of six and eight. Each of the four interviews involved a
different number context: doubling, finding missing parts, sharing, and
working with money. Each context involved a task presented in a series of
increasingly difficult items, with number size predominantly determining the
difficulty level. A dynamic interview format was used to encourage children
to work beyond their independent level, or "number comfort zone." Cues
and scaffolds were provided to support children's construction of meaning
within their "number construction zone" and towards the outer limits of their
understanding.
Analysis focused on the strategies children used to make sense of each item,
and the cognitive, affective and contextual aspects which enhanced or
constrained their mathematical activity within the number construction zone.
Results were reported two ways. The first, specific task performance across
children, provided a means of describing the diversity of developmentally
appropriate ways children made sense of the different tasks and provided a
frame of reference for considering individual performance. The second
approach to reporting results considered individual children's performance
across tasks, and provided a means of focusing on characteristics of emerging
competence.
Results of this study illustrate how the nature and use of children's reasoning
strategies can provide an indication of developing competence. Results
highlight specific conceptual, procedural, functional, and affective
characteristics that most directly affected children's capacity to make sense of
number situations. No single characteristic alone accounted for children's
success or lack of success, rather the inter-relationships of the different
characteristics was apparent, with strengths in one area compensating for
weaknesses in another. Though conceptual and procedural abilities appeared
to shape to a great extent the nature of the number knowledge available to
children, affective considerations and functional competence played a major
role in shaping the extent to which children drew on this existing knowledge.
Issues of context influenced both aspects of number sense: available
knowledge and the nature of its use. Number size, context of the tasks, and
presentation of tasks influenced children's mathematical activity in important
ways. Children's personal number contexts were considered in terms of how
they influenced their approaches to tasks. Overall, dynamic assessment
techniques proved to offer a viable alternative for exploring the limits of
children's ability to make sense of number situations, and for considering
children's construction of meaning for number in developmental terms.
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A comparison of enumeration skills in older and younger adultsDell, Tiffany Christian (Christa) 05 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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