Learning and thought
characteristics of "weak" math students
This is a thought provoking research done by Dr. Ronnie
Karsenty, Prof. Abraham Arcavi and
Dr. Nurit Hadas at the Department of
Science Teaching, Weizmann Institute of Science. I've known it in Hebrew but luckily was able
to find an English version as well:
Exploring informal
mathematical products of low achievers at the secondary school level. Ronnie Karsenty, Abraham Arcavi, Nurit Hadas. Journal of Mathematical
Behavior 26 (2007) 156–177.
This paper is free for download.
This paper helped us develop the Jerusalem municipality
educational psychology service's approach to assessing math and math
disabilities.
The point I found the most interesting in this research (among
many other interesting points which I will not mention here) is that every
child, including a child with poor math skills, has an inner theory or an inner
set of basic intuitions or premises according to which he performs in
math. Children invent informal methods to solve math problems that
are based on these inner theories. Children's
math mistakes are not coincidental but are the result of implementing the inner
intuitions or theories. The uncovering,
during assessment, of the child's inner theory will help us understand how he
thinks, where the problem is and how to assist him.
The process of
uncovering the child's inner theory is a dynamic process of inquiry, targeted
at encouraging the child to test his premises and consequently decide whether to keep or to change
them. Thus the assessment process
becomes one of discovery, during which the child learns about himself (reflects
on his thinking process) and also learns the material that is being taught.
I think math teachers
should find this research interesting and stimulating, suggesting a fresh
way
to work with low achieving students.
This assessment
process – the uncovering of the inner premises that guide children's work, is
useful not only for math assessment, but for reading comprehension assessment as
well. A parallel process can be done
with a text: uncovering, with the child, his inner premises about the text,
that caused him to draw the conclusions he drew. This way we can understand the sources of his
difficulties and design, with the child's collaboration, suitable
interventions.
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