APPROACHING THE BORDERLANDS OF STATISTICS AND MATHEMATICS IN THE CLASSROOM: QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS ENGENDERING AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY

Authors

  • JANE M. WATSON University of Tasmania
  • ERICA L. NATHAN University of Tasmania

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52041/serj.v9i2.376

Keywords:

Statistics education research, Teaching statistics, Teaching mathematics, Pedagogical content knowledge, Teacher interviews

Abstract

To capture aspects of pedagogical content knowledge (PCK) not illuminated in an earlier written survey, an interview protocol was used with 40 middle school teachers. The scenarios were intended to elicit teachers’ understanding of the big ideas, ability to anticipate students’ answers, and intervention strategies for the classroom. This was expected to be a straight-forward journey based on teachers’ responses to three context-based scenarios regarding students’ answers to questions. Instead we were surprised by teachers’ responses that revealed their perceptions that their experiences teaching mathematics and teaching statistics are very different. This led to further analysis of the PCK tasks and a suggestion that the mathematics embedded in the tasks was sometimes an impediment for the teachers, especially in relation to intervention strategies in the classroom.

First published November 2010 at Statistics Education Research Journal: Archives

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Published

2010-11-29