Knowing a Thousand Formulas Is Not The Same as Knowing Mathematics
Knowing a Thousand Formulas Is Not The Same as Knowing Mathematics
Abstract
This research is about how students at different levels of mathematical studies view, understand
and study mathematics. The research is based on two theories on mathematical understanding,
James Hiebert and Patricia Lefevre’s (1986) theory on mathematical knowledge as divided into
procedural knowledge and conceptual knowledge and Anna Sfards’ (1991) theory on
mathematical understanding as the duality of structural understanding and operational
understanding. Rooted in these theories, the mathematical understanding, views of mathematics,
and how mathematics is studied by students at the gymnasium, student teachers and students
studying advanced mathematics at university in Sweden, are researched. It is analyzed whether
views, understandings and ways to study differ between different levels and whether students’
views and understandings impact students' ways of studying. The method used is mixed methods,
involving both qualitative and quantitative methods. The students answered a questionnaire and
their answers were summarized and analyzed with the help of coding and qualitative content
analysis. The results point out that the most common way to view mathematics differs quite a lot
between students at the gymnasium and students at the university and so do the ways of studying
and the ways of understanding mathematics. The results show a correlation between the way
students at different levels view mathematics, how they understand it and how they study it, with
the students at the gymnasium having more of a procedural approach to mathematics than
students at university.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2021-09-07Author
Wahl, Kajsa
Keywords
Conceptual knowledge, procedural knowledge, structural understanding, operational understanding, views, ways to study, levels of study
Language
eng