Outcomes for Mathematical Literacy

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Outcomes for Mathematical Literacy: Do Attitudes About Math Change?

AMATYC 2015 Session S023

Mathematical Literacy Overview Old Course Sequence

PreAlgebra

Beginning Algebra

Intermediat e Algebra

Gen Ed Math or Intro to Stat College Algebra or Pre-Calculus

Current Course Sequence

PreAlgebra

Intro to Statistics or Gen Ed Math

Math Literacy Intermediate Algebra

College Algebra or Pre-Calculus

Goals  Create a new track for gen-ed bound students  Keep core algebra content, add data literacy  De-emphasize by-hand algebraic simplification  Add more applications, exploration, and writing  Use technology

Philosophy of Course Problem Solving Math in context, focus on numeracy, data analysis, and functions

Group Work Little to no lecture

Develop critical thinking and conceptual understanding

Collaboration as a tool for problem solving and thinking.

Real problems don’t follow cookie-cutter patterns; they take work

Assigning groups: • 3-4 students per group • Mix of abilities

Students need to take responsibility

Full participation required • Students may not opt out of group work • Points given for quality participation

Persistence will pay off

Active participation required

Diverse Assignments Daily lessons that require:  Reading  Writing  Technology Online skills work outside of class Unit projects

Keep calm and carry on: Mathematicians don’t know how to solve every problem immediately. They just know how to start thinking about it! Questions? Contact Erin Wilding-Martin at [email protected]

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Outcomes for Mathematical Literacy: Do Attitudes About Math Change?

AMATYC 2015 Session S023

Do Student Attitudes Change? 5

Comparison of Pre- and Post-survey attitudes

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Mathematical Attitudes measured along 4 dimensions using the Attitudes Towards Mathematics Inventory (Tapia & Marsh, 2004):    

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Motivation (9 items) Value (8 items) Confidence (15 items) Enjoyment (8 items)

Pre-survey given in first week of class and post-survey given the last two weeks.

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Motivation Enjoyment Pre-survey mean

Attitude Scale Motivation Enjoyment Value Confidence

N* 60 59 54 49

Value

Confidence

Post-survey mean

Pre-survey mean 2.822 2.919 3.734 2.869

Post-survey mean 2.926 3.1 3.831 3.052

Average difference (s.e.) 0.104 (0.063) 0.180 (0.071) 0.097 (0.059) 0.182 (0.085)

p-value (diff ≠ 0) 0.1068 0.0143 0.1063 0.0366

Note: 5 = Strongly Agree; 4 = Agree; 3 = Neither agree nor disagree; 2 = Disagree; 1 = Strongly disagree. * Each subscale was composed of multiple items for which a student needed complete data in order to have a valid score. As a result, the sample size for each subscale varies depending on how many individual had complete data for the scale.

 Men had a significantly higher shift in motivation compared to their female counterparts.  There were no significant differences in attitudes on the pre-survey between the students who took both surveys (almost-completers) to those who only took the first one (noncompleters). 120.00

Attitude Changes, by Percent

100.00

80.00

60.00

40.00

9 students increased all of their attitudes towards math, 13 increased on three of the four scales. In contrast, only 3 students did not increase any of their attitude scores. Questions? Contact Martha Makowski at [email protected]

20.00

0.00

Motivation

Enjoyment

Negative Change

Value

No Change

Confidence

Positive Change

Tapia, M., & Marsh, G. E., II (2004). An instrument to measure mathematics attitudes. Academic Exchange Quarterly, 8(2), 16-21.

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