Knowing mathematics for teaching: a case study of teacher responses to students' errors and difficulties in teaching equivalent fractions

The goal of this study is to align teachers’ Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching (MKT) with their classroom instruction. To reduce the classroom complexity while keeping the connection between teaching and learning, I focused on Teacher Responses to Student Errors and Difficulties (TRED) in teaching...

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Main Author: Ding, Meixia
Other Authors: Kulm, Gerald
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1481
http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1481
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-14812013-01-08T10:40:31ZKnowing mathematics for teaching: a case study of teacher responses to students' errors and difficulties in teaching equivalent fractionsDing, Meixiateacher responsesmathematical knoweldge for teachingstudents' errors and difficultiesequivalent fractionsThe goal of this study is to align teachers’ Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching (MKT) with their classroom instruction. To reduce the classroom complexity while keeping the connection between teaching and learning, I focused on Teacher Responses to Student Errors and Difficulties (TRED) in teaching equivalent fractions with an eye on students’ cognitive gains as the assessment of teaching effects. This research used a qualitative paradigm. Classroom videos concerning equivalent fractions from six teachers were observed and triangulated with tests of teacher knowledge and personal interviews. The data collection and analysis went through a naturalistic inquiry process. The results indicated that great differences about TRED existed in different classrooms around six themes: two learning difficulties regarding critical prior knowledge; two common errors related to the learning goal, and two emergent topics concerning basic mathematical ideas. Each of these themes affected students’ cognitive gains. Teachers’ knowledge as reflected by teacher interviews, however, was not necessarily consistent with their classroom instruction. Among these six teachers, other than one teacher whose knowledge obviously lagged behind, the other five teachers demonstrated similar good understanding of equivalent fractions. With respect to the basic mathematical ideas, their knowledge and sensitivity showed differences. The teachers who understood equivalent fractions and also the basic mathematical ideas were able to teach for understanding. Based on these six teachers’ practitioner knowledge, a Mathematical Knowledge Package for Teaching (MKPT) concerning equivalent fractions was provided as a professional knowledge base. In addition, this study argued that only when teachers had knowledge bases with strong connections to mathematical foundations could they flexibly activate and transfer their knowledge (CCK and PCK) to their use of knowledge (SCK) in the teaching contexts. Therefore, further attention is called for in collaboratively cultivating teachers’ mathematical sensitivity.Kulm, GeraldLi, Yeping2010-01-14T23:55:48Z2010-01-16T01:49:41Z2010-01-14T23:55:48Z2010-01-16T01:49:41Z2007-082009-05-15BookThesisElectronic Dissertationtextelectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1481http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1481en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic teacher responses

mathematical knoweldge for teaching
students' errors and difficulties
equivalent fractions
spellingShingle teacher responses

mathematical knoweldge for teaching
students' errors and difficulties
equivalent fractions
Ding, Meixia
Knowing mathematics for teaching: a case study of teacher responses to students' errors and difficulties in teaching equivalent fractions
description The goal of this study is to align teachers’ Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching (MKT) with their classroom instruction. To reduce the classroom complexity while keeping the connection between teaching and learning, I focused on Teacher Responses to Student Errors and Difficulties (TRED) in teaching equivalent fractions with an eye on students’ cognitive gains as the assessment of teaching effects. This research used a qualitative paradigm. Classroom videos concerning equivalent fractions from six teachers were observed and triangulated with tests of teacher knowledge and personal interviews. The data collection and analysis went through a naturalistic inquiry process. The results indicated that great differences about TRED existed in different classrooms around six themes: two learning difficulties regarding critical prior knowledge; two common errors related to the learning goal, and two emergent topics concerning basic mathematical ideas. Each of these themes affected students’ cognitive gains. Teachers’ knowledge as reflected by teacher interviews, however, was not necessarily consistent with their classroom instruction. Among these six teachers, other than one teacher whose knowledge obviously lagged behind, the other five teachers demonstrated similar good understanding of equivalent fractions. With respect to the basic mathematical ideas, their knowledge and sensitivity showed differences. The teachers who understood equivalent fractions and also the basic mathematical ideas were able to teach for understanding. Based on these six teachers’ practitioner knowledge, a Mathematical Knowledge Package for Teaching (MKPT) concerning equivalent fractions was provided as a professional knowledge base. In addition, this study argued that only when teachers had knowledge bases with strong connections to mathematical foundations could they flexibly activate and transfer their knowledge (CCK and PCK) to their use of knowledge (SCK) in the teaching contexts. Therefore, further attention is called for in collaboratively cultivating teachers’ mathematical sensitivity.
author2 Kulm, Gerald
author_facet Kulm, Gerald
Ding, Meixia
author Ding, Meixia
author_sort Ding, Meixia
title Knowing mathematics for teaching: a case study of teacher responses to students' errors and difficulties in teaching equivalent fractions
title_short Knowing mathematics for teaching: a case study of teacher responses to students' errors and difficulties in teaching equivalent fractions
title_full Knowing mathematics for teaching: a case study of teacher responses to students' errors and difficulties in teaching equivalent fractions
title_fullStr Knowing mathematics for teaching: a case study of teacher responses to students' errors and difficulties in teaching equivalent fractions
title_full_unstemmed Knowing mathematics for teaching: a case study of teacher responses to students' errors and difficulties in teaching equivalent fractions
title_sort knowing mathematics for teaching: a case study of teacher responses to students' errors and difficulties in teaching equivalent fractions
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1481
http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1481
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