Young children's statistical reasoning : a tale of two contexts


Autoria(s): Kinnear, Virginia A.
Data(s)

2013

Resumo

This thesis explored the knowledge and reasoning of young children in solving novel statistical problems, and the influence of problem context and design on their solutions. It found that young children's statistical competencies are underestimated, and that problem design and context facilitated children's application of a wide range of knowledge and reasoning skills, none of which had been taught. A qualitative design-based research method, informed by the Models and Modeling perspective (Lesh & Doerr, 2003) underpinned the study. Data modelling activities incorporating picture story books were used to contextualise the problems. Children applied real-world understanding to problem solving, including attribute identification, categorisation and classification skills. Intuitive and metarepresentational knowledge together with inductive and probabilistic reasoning was used to make sense of data, and beginning awareness of statistical variation and informal inference was visible.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/63496/

Publicador

Queensland University of Technology

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/63496/1/Virginia_KINNEAR_Thesis.pdf

Kinnear, Virginia A. (2013) Young children's statistical reasoning : a tale of two contexts. PhD thesis, Queensland University of Technology.

Direitos

Copyright 2013 Virginia Kinnear

Fonte

Office of Education Research; Faculty of Education

Palavras-Chave #statistics #statistical learning #Models and Modeling #Data modeling #young children's mathematical learning #young children's statistical learning #mathematics picture books
Tipo

Thesis