Teo Paoletti , Irma E. Stevens , Srujana Acharya , Claudine Margolis , Allison Olshefke-Clark , Allison L Gantt
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Exploring and promoting a student's covariational reasoning and developing graphing meanings
Despite the importance of graphical reasoning, graph construction and interpretation has been shown to be nontrivial. Paoletti et al. (2023) presented a framework that allows for a fine-grained analysis of students’ graphical reasoning as they conceive of graphs as representing two covarying quantities. In this paper, we show how the framework can be used to not only characterize a student’s graphing meanings and reasoning, but also to diagnose complexities in a student's development of such reasoning, and to design tasks that provide opportunities to resolve such complexities. We draw on data from a teaching experiment with a sixth-grade student in the U.S. to highlight how the framework allowed us to identify indications and contraindications of the student’s engaging in reasoning compatible with the framework. Further, we describe how this analysis supported us in designing a task that was aligned with the framework and proved productive in supporting the student's learning. We conclude with a discussion of our findings and their implications for task design and future research.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Mathematical Behavior solicits original research on the learning and teaching of mathematics. We are interested especially in basic research, research that aims to clarify, in detail and depth, how mathematical ideas develop in learners. Over three decades, our experience confirms a founding premise of this journal: that mathematical thinking, hence mathematics learning as a social enterprise, is special. It is special because mathematics is special, both logically and psychologically. Logically, through the way that mathematical ideas and methods have been built, refined and organized for centuries across a range of cultures; and psychologically, through the variety of ways people today, in many walks of life, make sense of mathematics, develop it, make it their own.