posted on 2008-01-01, 00:00authored byLeicha Bragg, C Nicol
This study examines preservice elementary teachers' reported experiences of posing open-ended mathematics problems. Responses of 33 students in a mathematics teacher education course were analysed for the strategies participants used, what they learned and the challenges encountered from an opportunity to collect digital images and pose open-ended problems related to those images. Results indicate that preservice teachers reported a shift in the ways they viewed mathematics and how it might be taught. The school curriculum both constrained and provided possibilities for preservice teachers in noticing mathematics beyond the textbook and mathematics classroom. This study adds to our understanding of teaching as a learning practice and the art of posing mathematical problems as a significant aspect of that practice.
History
Pagination
201 - 208
Location
Morelia, Mexico
Open access
Yes
Start date
2008-07-17
End date
2008-07-21
ISBN-13
9789689020073
ISBN-10
9689020072
Language
eng
Publication classification
E2 Full written paper - non-refereed / Abstract reviewed
Copyright notice
2008, International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education
Editor/Contributor(s)
O Figueras, J Cortina, S Alatorre, T Rojano, A Sepulveda
Title of proceedings
PME 32 : Mathematical ideas : history, education and cognition : Proceedings of the 32nd Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education