Preservice Secondary Mathematics Teachers’ Knowledge of Students

The aim of this paper is to present the nature of preservice secondary mathematics teachers’ knowledge of students as emerged from a study investigating the development of their pedagogical content knowledge in a methods course and its associated field experience. Six preservice teachers participate...

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Main Author: Hülya Kılıç
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry (TOJQI) 2011-04-01
Series:Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.tojqi.net/articles/TOJQI_2_2/TOJQI_2_2_Article_3.pdf
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spelling doaj-3e623ecf89c2457faaf925e53eba637c2021-09-02T03:15:07ZengTurkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry (TOJQI)Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry1309-65912011-04-01221735Preservice Secondary Mathematics Teachers’ Knowledge of StudentsHülya KılıçThe aim of this paper is to present the nature of preservice secondary mathematics teachers’ knowledge of students as emerged from a study investigating the development of their pedagogical content knowledge in a methods course and its associated field experience. Six preservice teachers participated in the study and the data were collected in the forms of observations, interviews and written documents. Knowledge of students is defined as teachers’ knowledge of what mathematical concepts are difficult for students to grasp, which concepts students typically have misconceptions about, possible sources of students’ errors, and how to eliminate those difficulties and misconceptions. The findings revealed that preservice teachers had difficulty in both identifying the source of students’ misconceptions, and errors and generating effective ways different than telling the rules or procedures to eliminate such misconceptions. Furthermore, preservice teachers’ knowledge of students was intertwined with their knowledge of subject matter and knowledge of pedagogy. They neither had strong conceptual knowledge of mathematics nor rich repertoire of teaching strategies. Therefore, they frequently failed to recognize what conceptual knowledge the students were lacking and inclined to address students’ errors by telling how to carry out the procedure or apply the rule to solve the given problem correctly. http://www.tojqi.net/articles/TOJQI_2_2/TOJQI_2_2_Article_3.pdfKnowledge of studentspedagogical content knowledgemathematicspreservice teachers
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hülya Kılıç
spellingShingle Hülya Kılıç
Preservice Secondary Mathematics Teachers’ Knowledge of Students
Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry
Knowledge of students
pedagogical content knowledge
mathematics
preservice teachers
author_facet Hülya Kılıç
author_sort Hülya Kılıç
title Preservice Secondary Mathematics Teachers’ Knowledge of Students
title_short Preservice Secondary Mathematics Teachers’ Knowledge of Students
title_full Preservice Secondary Mathematics Teachers’ Knowledge of Students
title_fullStr Preservice Secondary Mathematics Teachers’ Knowledge of Students
title_full_unstemmed Preservice Secondary Mathematics Teachers’ Knowledge of Students
title_sort preservice secondary mathematics teachers’ knowledge of students
publisher Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry (TOJQI)
series Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry
issn 1309-6591
publishDate 2011-04-01
description The aim of this paper is to present the nature of preservice secondary mathematics teachers’ knowledge of students as emerged from a study investigating the development of their pedagogical content knowledge in a methods course and its associated field experience. Six preservice teachers participated in the study and the data were collected in the forms of observations, interviews and written documents. Knowledge of students is defined as teachers’ knowledge of what mathematical concepts are difficult for students to grasp, which concepts students typically have misconceptions about, possible sources of students’ errors, and how to eliminate those difficulties and misconceptions. The findings revealed that preservice teachers had difficulty in both identifying the source of students’ misconceptions, and errors and generating effective ways different than telling the rules or procedures to eliminate such misconceptions. Furthermore, preservice teachers’ knowledge of students was intertwined with their knowledge of subject matter and knowledge of pedagogy. They neither had strong conceptual knowledge of mathematics nor rich repertoire of teaching strategies. Therefore, they frequently failed to recognize what conceptual knowledge the students were lacking and inclined to address students’ errors by telling how to carry out the procedure or apply the rule to solve the given problem correctly.
topic Knowledge of students
pedagogical content knowledge
mathematics
preservice teachers
url http://www.tojqi.net/articles/TOJQI_2_2/TOJQI_2_2_Article_3.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT hulyakılıc preservicesecondarymathematicsteachersknowledgeofstudents
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