6533b826fe1ef96bd1284da2
RESEARCH PRODUCT
The complexity of knowledge construction in a classroom setting
Tommy DreyfusChris RasmussenNaneh ApkarianMichal Tabachsubject
knowledge construction in classroomsTeachers' and students' practices at university levelteaching and learning of analysis and calculusparadoxes[SHS.EDU]Humanities and Social Sciences/Education[MATH.MATH-HO]Mathematics [math]/History and Overview [math.HO][SHS.EDU] Humanities and Social Sciences/Education[MATH.MATH-HO] Mathematics [math]/History and Overview [math.HO]description
International audience; We study a class of mathematics education MA students in an introductory course on Chaos and Fractals, as they grapple with the Sierpinksi triangle, and in particular with the apparent paradox that its area equals 0, while its perimeter is infinitely long. For this purpose, we network an approach for investigating the construction of knowledge in small groups with one for examining how ideas and ways of reasoning function-as-if-shared in a classroom. Our results show complexities: (i) small group work and whole class discussions mutually influence each other; (ii) ideas may function-as-if-shared in the whole class even if the majority of students have not previously constructed them in their groups; (iii) knowledge constructed in the small groups may or may not later function-as-if-shared in the whole class.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-04-05 |