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Middle-School Students' Understanding of the Equal Sign: The Books They Read Can't Help
172
Citations
21
References
2006
Year
Educational WritingMathematics CognitionEducational PsychologyEducationSymbol UseElementary EducationTeacher EducationEducational EquityMathematics EducationEqual SignEqual SignsInclusive EducationPresent Equal SignsClassroom PracticeAmerican Sign LanguageLearning SciencesClassroom InstructionNumeracyEqual Educational OpportunityReasoningMiddle School CurriculumMiddle-school StudentsTeacher PreparationEducational AssessmentSecondary Mathematics EducationMathematics Teacher Education
Abstract This study examined how 4 middle school textbook series (2 skills-based, 2 Standards-based) present equal signs. Equal signs were often presented in standard operations equals answer contexts (e.g., 3 + 4 = 7) and were rarely presented in nonstandard operations on both sides contexts (e.g., 3 + 4 = 5 + 2). They were, however, presented in other nonstandard contexts (e.g., 7 = 7). Two follow-up experiments showed that students' interpretations of the equal sign depend on the context. The other nonstandard contexts were better than the operations equals answer context at eliciting a relational understanding of the equal sign, but the operations on both sides context was best. Results suggest that textbooks rarely present equal signs in contexts most likely to elicit a relational interpretation—an interpretation critical to success in algebra.
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