Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6843325 | The Journal of Mathematical Behavior | 2018 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
This study investigates secondary school mathematics teachers' attention to potential teaching situations that encourage argumentation. A group of 17 seventh grade teachers were asked to choose three tasks from a textbook they all use in teaching, which, in their view, have the potential to encourage argumentation, and then to justify their choices. Analysis of the teachers' responses revealed categories that fall into three dimensions of attention: (1) Attention to the mathematics in which the argumentation is embedded, focusing on three aspects: the mathematics inherent in the task; the mathematics related to the teaching sequence of which the task is a part; and the meta-level principles of mathematics; (2) Attention to socio-cultural aspects related to argumentation; and (3) Attention to students' ways of thinking which might be revealed by the task. Analysis of each response revealed four types of combinations of dimensions of attention: a. Responses attending to all three dimensions; b. Responses attending solely to the mathematics inherent in the task; c. Responses attending only to the socio-cultural dimension; and d. Responses refers to none of these dimensions. Analysis also found that responses of the same teacher were of the same type of combination. The findings were interpreted in light of theory and practice and suggestions for additional research emerged.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Mathematics
Applied Mathematics
Authors
Michal Ayalon, Rina Hershkowitz,