The State of Mathematics Achievement

The State of Mathematics Achievement
Author: Ina V. S. Mullis
Publisher: DIANE Publishing
Total Pages: 48
Release: 1993-12
Genre:
ISBN: 9780788101069

The Nation1s Report Card on mathematics achievement in all 50 States in grades 4, 8 and 12. Covers: achievement by population subgroups (gender, region, type of school.,etc.); proficiency by content area; course-taking patterns; student performance; instructional approaches; calculators and computers; characteristics of math teachers, and much more. Graphs and tables.

The Impact of Graphing Calculators on the Mathematics Achievement of Black Females

The Impact of Graphing Calculators on the Mathematics Achievement of Black Females
Author: Tonya Bates
Publisher:
Total Pages: 160
Release: 2021
Genre:
ISBN:

This study examines the effect of the usage of graphing calculators on Black Females' mathematics achievement on the 12th grade National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP). This non-experimental research study will analyze the 2015 NAEP publicly available data set, using the twelfth-grade sample, examining their overall math achievement compared to graphing calculator usage, race, gender, and socioeconomic status. Four regressions will be used to analyze factors created from the twelfth-grade NAEP student surveys, with test results as the dependent variable. The regressions will use race, gender, socioeconomic status., and graphing calculator usage in the classroom as independent variables, and the NAEP results as results of the regression analysis will be used to evaluate the predictive power of the model. Previous. studies on mathematics achievement have used only 4th and 8th-grade data. This investigation will contribute to the body of research by investigating the 12th-grade NAEP results.

The Role of Graphing Calculators in Students' Algebraic Thinking

The Role of Graphing Calculators in Students' Algebraic Thinking
Author: Sandy Margaret Spitzer
Publisher: ProQuest
Total Pages:
Release: 2008
Genre: Algebra
ISBN: 9780549811756

Chapter 1 provides a review of the literature on the effects of using graphing calculators on students' mathematics achievement. General findings suggest that calculators can have a positive effect on students' performance on assessments. In particular, students using graphing calculators seem to do better on some types of problems, such as those requiring translation between different representations of a function, and perform about the same as students without calculators on procedural symbolic-manipulation problems. In order to identify possible mechanisms for these changes, the chapter explores four possible reasons for students' improved performance: improved representational fluency, wider repertoire of solution strategies, increased reification of mathematical concepts, and changes in classroom processes. While the general trend of improved achievement appears robust, none of the four hypothesized reasons for improvement were substantiated by enough data to be confirmed. While it appears that the basic effects of graphing calculators are relatively well determined, mechanisms for those effects are poorly understood. Chapter 2 presents the result of a study whose goal was to investigate how the presence of graphing calculator technology influences the mathematical ideas that students encounter while solving algebra problems. Thirty-three Algebra II students, divided randomly into two conditions, participated in task-based interviews. In one condition, students were encouraged to solve algebra problems using their graphing calculator, and in the other condition, students solved the same problems with no access to technology. Results indicate that when students used graphing calculators, they were more likely to interpret letters as variables rather than fixed unknowns, used a wider range of strategies, were more likely to use more than one strategy to solve a problem, and expressed deeper levels of conceptual understanding. The differences in conceptual understanding and interpretation of letters were strongly related to the types of strategies that students used to solve problems, with graphing and tables encouraging more sophisticated interpretations and evidence of conceptual understanding.