Year 6 students' idiosyncratic notions of unitising, reunitising and regrouping decimal number places


Autoria(s): Baturo, Annette R.; Cooper, Thomas J.
Contribuinte(s)

Nakahara, Tadao

Koyama, Masataka

Data(s)

2000

Resumo

Having flexible notions of the unit (e.g., 26 ones can be thought of as 2.6 tens, 1 ten 16 ones, 260 tenths, etc.) should be a major focus of elementary mathematics education. However, often these powerful notions are relegated to computations where the major emphasis is on "getting the right answer" thus procedural knowledge rather than conceptual knowledge becomes the primary focus. This paper reports on 22 high-performing students' reunitising processes ascertained from individual interviews on tasks requiring unitising, reunitising and regrouping; errors were categorised to depict particular thinking strategies. The results show that, even for high-performing students, regrouping is a cognitively complex task. This paper analyses this complexity and draws inferences for teaching.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/27528/

Publicador

International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education (PME)

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/27528/2/27528.pdf

http://igpme.org/view.asp?pg=conferences&str=con_past

Baturo, Annette R. & Cooper, Thomas J. (2000) Year 6 students' idiosyncratic notions of unitising, reunitising and regrouping decimal number places. In Nakahara, Tadao & Koyama, Masataka (Eds.) Proceedings of : the 24th Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 23-27 July 2000, Hiroshima, Japan.

Direitos

Copyright 2000 please contact the authors.

Fonte

Office of Education Research; School of Curriculum; Faculty of Education

Palavras-Chave #130208 Mathematics and Numeracy Curriculum and Pedagogy #Cognitive processes #Computation #Error patterns #Mathematical concepts #Year 6
Tipo

Conference Paper