Investigation of Finnish and German 9th grade students’ personal meaning with relation to mathematics

This study focuses on a comparison of personal meanings that students from Finland (FIN) and Germany (GER) assign to (learning) mathematics. Participants are 256 Finnish and 276 German ninth graders. The survey consists of 18 scales that are based on the theory of personal meaning. The original Ger...

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Main Authors: Neruja Suriakumaran, Markku S. Hannula, Maike Vollstedt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LUMA Centre Finland 2019-10-01
Series:LUMAT
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.helsinki.fi/lumat/article/view/1255
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spelling doaj-0eeb1a47524548898995d5706ab834662020-11-25T02:40:46ZengLUMA Centre FinlandLUMAT2323-71122019-10-017210.31129/LUMAT.7.2.411Investigation of Finnish and German 9th grade students’ personal meaning with relation to mathematicsNeruja Suriakumaran0Markku S. Hannula1Maike Vollstedt2University of Bremen, GermanyUniversity of Helsinki, FinlandAG Didaktik der Mathematik, University of Bremen, Germany This study focuses on a comparison of personal meanings that students from Finland (FIN) and Germany (GER) assign to (learning) mathematics. Participants are 256 Finnish and 276 German ninth graders. The survey consists of 18 scales that are based on the theory of personal meaning. The original German version was translated into Finnish. Using item response theory (IRT) partial credit models, the psychometric properties of the scales were found to be good. As statistical procedure, Differential Item Functioning (DIF) analysis and mean comparisons were conducted to compare the two groups’ (FIN and GER) responses. Indicators of educational system and curriculum could be found in students’ responses to explain similarities and differences between the two samples. In both countries, social inclusion is meaningful for most of the students (Support by teacher, Experience of relatedness, and Emotional-affective relation to teacher). In addition, it is personally meaningful for Finnish students to do well in mathematics. This shows a link to identity-related questions such as confirming important aspects of the self. Hence, personal meanings related to mathematics are more common in Finland than in Germany (Active practice of mathematics, Cognitive challenge, and Self-perfection). https://journals.helsinki.fi/lumat/article/view/1255Comparative study Finland / Germanycurriculumdifferential item functioningeducational systemIRT partial credit modelspersonal meaning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Neruja Suriakumaran
Markku S. Hannula
Maike Vollstedt
spellingShingle Neruja Suriakumaran
Markku S. Hannula
Maike Vollstedt
Investigation of Finnish and German 9th grade students’ personal meaning with relation to mathematics
LUMAT
Comparative study Finland / Germany
curriculum
differential item functioning
educational system
IRT partial credit models
personal meaning
author_facet Neruja Suriakumaran
Markku S. Hannula
Maike Vollstedt
author_sort Neruja Suriakumaran
title Investigation of Finnish and German 9th grade students’ personal meaning with relation to mathematics
title_short Investigation of Finnish and German 9th grade students’ personal meaning with relation to mathematics
title_full Investigation of Finnish and German 9th grade students’ personal meaning with relation to mathematics
title_fullStr Investigation of Finnish and German 9th grade students’ personal meaning with relation to mathematics
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of Finnish and German 9th grade students’ personal meaning with relation to mathematics
title_sort investigation of finnish and german 9th grade students’ personal meaning with relation to mathematics
publisher LUMA Centre Finland
series LUMAT
issn 2323-7112
publishDate 2019-10-01
description This study focuses on a comparison of personal meanings that students from Finland (FIN) and Germany (GER) assign to (learning) mathematics. Participants are 256 Finnish and 276 German ninth graders. The survey consists of 18 scales that are based on the theory of personal meaning. The original German version was translated into Finnish. Using item response theory (IRT) partial credit models, the psychometric properties of the scales were found to be good. As statistical procedure, Differential Item Functioning (DIF) analysis and mean comparisons were conducted to compare the two groups’ (FIN and GER) responses. Indicators of educational system and curriculum could be found in students’ responses to explain similarities and differences between the two samples. In both countries, social inclusion is meaningful for most of the students (Support by teacher, Experience of relatedness, and Emotional-affective relation to teacher). In addition, it is personally meaningful for Finnish students to do well in mathematics. This shows a link to identity-related questions such as confirming important aspects of the self. Hence, personal meanings related to mathematics are more common in Finland than in Germany (Active practice of mathematics, Cognitive challenge, and Self-perfection).
topic Comparative study Finland / Germany
curriculum
differential item functioning
educational system
IRT partial credit models
personal meaning
url https://journals.helsinki.fi/lumat/article/view/1255
work_keys_str_mv AT nerujasuriakumaran investigationoffinnishandgerman9thgradestudentspersonalmeaningwithrelationtomathematics
AT markkushannula investigationoffinnishandgerman9thgradestudentspersonalmeaningwithrelationtomathematics
AT maikevollstedt investigationoffinnishandgerman9thgradestudentspersonalmeaningwithrelationtomathematics
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