Abstract
This study investigated the nature of written modeling tasks reported by instructors of required courses in five secondary mathematics teacher education programs. These tasks were analyzed based on a framework addressing potential cognitive orientation (simple procedures, complex procedures, and rich tasks) and purpose (epistemological, educational, contextual, and socio-critical modeling) of the tasks. Our analysis suggests that most tasks included questions of more than one cognitive orientation and more than half of the tasks were coded as contextual modeling. We also found that tasks that were coded as contextual modeling offered opportunities for future teachers to engage with questions at all levels of cognitive orientation. The nature of several modeling tasks, along with the ideas for refining the current frameworks, are presented for future implications of analyzing and developing modeling tasks.
Original language | American English |
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State | Published - Oct 7 2017 |
Event | International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education North American Chapter Annual Conference (PMENA) - Duration: Oct 7 2017 → … |
Conference
Conference | International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education North American Chapter Annual Conference (PMENA) |
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Period | 10/7/17 → … |
Keywords
- Mathematical modeling tasks
- Nature
- Secondary mathematics preservice teachers
DC Disciplines
- Mathematics
- Physical Sciences and Mathematics