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Preservice Teachers' Reasoning About Relationships That Are and Are Not Proportional: A Knowledge-in-Pieces Account
42
Citations
22
References
2017
Year
Mathematics CognitionEducational PsychologyTeacher-student RelationEducationDirect ProportionPsychologyElementary EducationSocial SciencesProportional ReasoningTeacher EducationMathematics EducationMathematical PsychologyCognitive DevelopmentNumerical CompetenceTeacher DevelopmentCognitive ScienceStatistical ThinkingNumeracyPreservice TeachersReasoningEpistemologyTeacher PreparationKnowledge-in-pieces AccountSecondary Mathematics EducationEducation PolicyMathematics Teacher EducationPersistent Difficulties
Past studies have documented students' and teachers' persistent difficulties in determining whether 2 quantities covary in a direct proportion, especially when presented missing-value word problems. In the current study, we combine a mathematical analysis with a psychological perspective to offer a new explanation for such difficulties. The mathematical analysis highlights numbers of equal-sized groups and places reasoning about proportional relationships in the context of reasoning about multiplicative relationships more generally. The psychological perspective is rooted in diSessa's (diSessa, 1993, 2006; diSessa, Sherin, & Levin, 2016) knowledge-in-pieces epistemology and highlights diverse, fine-grained knowledge resources that can support inferring and reasoning with equal-sized groups. We illustrate how the combination of mathematical analysis and psychological perspective may be applied to data using empirical examples drawn from interviews during which preservice middlegrades teachers reasoned with varying degrees of success about relationships presented in word problems that were and were not proportional.
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