Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
360866 The Journal of Mathematical Behavior 2012 19 Pages PDF
Abstract

We inspect the hypothesis that geometry students may be oriented toward how they expect that the teacher will evaluate them as students or otherwise oriented to how they expect that their work will give them opportunities to do mathematics. The results reported here are based on a mixed-methods analysis of twenty-two interviews with high school geometry students. In these interviews students respond to three different tasks that presented students with an opportunity to do a proof. Students’ responses are coded according to a scheme based on the hypothesis above. Interviews are also coded using a quantitative linguistic ratio that gauges how prominent the teacher was in the students’ opinions about the viability of these proof tasks. These scores were used in a cluster analysis that yielded three student profiles that we characterize using composite profiles. These profiles highlight the different ways that students can experience proof in the geometry classroom.

► High school students experience dual orientations in the geometry classroom. ► One orientation is to the evaluation of their work by the teacher. ► The other orientation is to opportunities to do mathematics. ► These orientations manifest when students are faced with proof tasks.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Applied Mathematics
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