DEAF MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENTS’ COMPREHENSION OF RELATIONAL LANGUAGE IN ARITHMETIC COMPARE PROBLEMS

This study examined the performance of deaf and hard of hearing middle school students on arithmetic compare word problems with relational statements. Thirteen prelingual, severe-to-profound deaf students were selected to participate. The results showed that the students were more likely to misund...

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Main Authors: ChongMin Lee, Peter V. Paul
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute for Human Rehabilitation 2019-04-01
Series:Human Research in Rehabilitation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://human.ba/wpdm-package/full-text-167/?wpdmdl=1296
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spelling doaj-29bb0c39b4474590bd1688b499f65a4c2020-11-25T01:21:19ZengInstitute for Human RehabilitationHuman Research in Rehabilitation2232-99352232-996X2019-04-019142310.21554/hrr.041901DEAF MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENTS’ COMPREHENSION OF RELATIONAL LANGUAGE IN ARITHMETIC COMPARE PROBLEMSChongMin Lee0Peter V. Paul1High School Math Teacher, Metro Deaf SchoolDepartment of Educational Studies, The Ohio State UniversityThis study examined the performance of deaf and hard of hearing middle school students on arithmetic compare word problems with relational statements. Thirteen prelingual, severe-to-profound deaf students were selected to participate. The results showed that the students were more likely to misunderstand a relational statement and make a reversal error when the required arithmetic operation was inconsistent with the statement’s relational term (e.g., choosing the operation of addition when the relational term was less than). There were no statistical differences in the number of reversal errors and on lexical markedness (i.e., marked vs. unmarked items). Finally, fraction-of-a-number relational terms exerted more influence on students’ abilities to solve word problems than did the lexical markedness. Findings are interpreted in light of the consistency effect hypothesis. Directions for future research and implications for instruction are also provided.https://human.ba/wpdm-package/full-text-167/?wpdmdl=1296compare word problemsconsistency effect hypothesisdeafmathematics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author ChongMin Lee
Peter V. Paul
spellingShingle ChongMin Lee
Peter V. Paul
DEAF MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENTS’ COMPREHENSION OF RELATIONAL LANGUAGE IN ARITHMETIC COMPARE PROBLEMS
Human Research in Rehabilitation
compare word problems
consistency effect hypothesis
deaf
mathematics
author_facet ChongMin Lee
Peter V. Paul
author_sort ChongMin Lee
title DEAF MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENTS’ COMPREHENSION OF RELATIONAL LANGUAGE IN ARITHMETIC COMPARE PROBLEMS
title_short DEAF MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENTS’ COMPREHENSION OF RELATIONAL LANGUAGE IN ARITHMETIC COMPARE PROBLEMS
title_full DEAF MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENTS’ COMPREHENSION OF RELATIONAL LANGUAGE IN ARITHMETIC COMPARE PROBLEMS
title_fullStr DEAF MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENTS’ COMPREHENSION OF RELATIONAL LANGUAGE IN ARITHMETIC COMPARE PROBLEMS
title_full_unstemmed DEAF MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENTS’ COMPREHENSION OF RELATIONAL LANGUAGE IN ARITHMETIC COMPARE PROBLEMS
title_sort deaf middle school students’ comprehension of relational language in arithmetic compare problems
publisher Institute for Human Rehabilitation
series Human Research in Rehabilitation
issn 2232-9935
2232-996X
publishDate 2019-04-01
description This study examined the performance of deaf and hard of hearing middle school students on arithmetic compare word problems with relational statements. Thirteen prelingual, severe-to-profound deaf students were selected to participate. The results showed that the students were more likely to misunderstand a relational statement and make a reversal error when the required arithmetic operation was inconsistent with the statement’s relational term (e.g., choosing the operation of addition when the relational term was less than). There were no statistical differences in the number of reversal errors and on lexical markedness (i.e., marked vs. unmarked items). Finally, fraction-of-a-number relational terms exerted more influence on students’ abilities to solve word problems than did the lexical markedness. Findings are interpreted in light of the consistency effect hypothesis. Directions for future research and implications for instruction are also provided.
topic compare word problems
consistency effect hypothesis
deaf
mathematics
url https://human.ba/wpdm-package/full-text-167/?wpdmdl=1296
work_keys_str_mv AT chongminlee deafmiddleschoolstudentscomprehensionofrelationallanguageinarithmeticcompareproblems
AT petervpaul deafmiddleschoolstudentscomprehensionofrelationallanguageinarithmeticcompareproblems
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