ELEMENTARY SCHOOL TEACHERS’ COMPREHENSION OF DATA DISPLAYS

Authors

  • TIMOTHY JACOBBE University of Florida
  • ROBERT M. HORTON Clemson University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52041/serj.v9i1.386

Keywords:

Statistics education research, Content knowledge, Graphical displays, Teacher preparation

Abstract

This study investigated elementary school teachers’ comprehension of data displays. Assessment, interview, and observation data were analyzed to determine their level of comprehension. Results revealed that the teachers were proficient at “reading the data” and computation types of “reading between the data” questions, but were unsuccessful with questions that assessed higher levels of graphical comprehension. Many of the difficulties exhibited by the teachers appear to be attributable to a lack of exposure to the content. Implications for teacher preparation, professional development, and curricula development are discussed.

First published May 2010 at Statistics Education Research Journal: Archives

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Published

2010-05-30

Issue

Section

Regular Articles