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What affordances do open-ended real-life tasks offer for sharing student agency in collaborative problem-solving?

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posted on 2025-03-18, 03:56 authored by Juuso NieminenJuuso Nieminen, MCE Chan, D Clarke
AbstractThe important role of student agency in collaborative problem-solving has been acknowledged in previous mathematics education research. However, what remains unknown are the processes of agency in open-ended tasks that draw on real-life contexts and demand argumentation beyond “mathematical”. In this study, we analyse a video recording of two student groups (each consisting of four students) taking part in collaborative problem-solving. We draw on the framework for collaborative construction of mathematical arguments and its interplay with student agency by Mueller et al. (2012). This original framework is supplemented by (i) testing and revising it in the context of open-ended real-life tasks, with (ii) student groups rather than pairs working on the tasks, and by (iii) offering a strengthened methodological pathway for analysing student agency in such a context. Based on our findings, we suggest that the framework suits this new context with some extensions. First, we note that differences in student agency were not only identified in terms of the discourse students drew on, but in how students were able to shift between various discourses, such as between “mathematical” and “non-mathematical” discourses. We identify a novel discourse reflecting student agency, invalidation discourse, which refers to denying other students’ agency by framing their contribution as invalid. Finally, we discuss the need to reframe “mathematical” arguments—and indeed student agency—while the task at hand is open-ended and concerns real-life contexts.

History

Journal

Educational Studies in Mathematics

Volume

109

Pagination

115-136

Location

Berlin, Germany

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0013-1954

eISSN

1573-0816

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Springer