• Title/Summary/Keyword: Korean perspective on mathematics education

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An Initial Contribution to the Development of a Design Theory of Mathematical Interests: The Case of Statistical Data Analysis

  • Cobb, Paul;Hodge, Lynn Liao
    • Communications of Mathematical Education
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    • v.16
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    • pp.1-65
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    • 2003
  • The focus of this article is on the process of cultivating students' interests so that they come to view mathematics as an activity worthy of their engagement. We first define and operationalize the notion of interests, in the process developing a perspective in which they are seen to be generative, to evolve, and to be deeply cultural. We concretize this perspective by presenting an analysis of a classroom design experiment that documents both the process by which the students' interests evolved and the means by which these developments were supported. We then frame the analysis as a case in which to tease out the implications for a nascent design theory of mathematical interests and in doing so give particular attention to the issue of equity in students' access to significant mathematical ideas

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A MODELING PERSPECTIVE OF DELIBERATE SELF-HARM

  • Do, Tae-Sug;Lee, Young-S.
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics
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    • v.14 no.4
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    • pp.275-284
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    • 2010
  • Deliberate self-harm (DSH) is the act of deliberately harming your own body, such as cutting or burning yourself, without suicidal intent. It has especially become a problem among adolescents and college-age students in institutional settings such as boarding schools, Greek houses, detention centers and hospitals. We focus on contagion of DSH among adolescents and young adults by creating a deterministic epidemiological model. We study the impact of actual peer pressure, virtual peer pressure (the Internet) and treatment analytically in terms of a basic reproduction number through stability analysis of a system of ordinary differential equations. All parameters are approximated and results are also explored by simulations. The model shows that DSH is present in an endemic state in the population considered, and the control strategies are discussed.

Understanding the Estimation of Circumference of the Earth by of Eratosthenes based on the History of Science, For Earth Science Education

  • Oh, Jun-Young
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Earth Science Education
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    • v.10 no.2
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    • pp.214-225
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    • 2017
  • The first accurate estimate of the Earth's circumference was made by the Hellenism scientist Eratosthenes (276-195 B.C.) in about 240 B.C. The simplicity and elegance of Eratosthenes' measurement of the circumference of the Earth by mathematics abstraction strategies were an excellent example of ancient Greek ingenuity. Eratosthenes's success was a triumph of logic and the scientific method, the method required that he assume that Sun was so far away that its light reached Earth along parallel lines. That assumption, however, should be supported by another set of measurements made by the ancient Hellenism, Aristarchus, namely, a rough measurement of the relative diameters and distances of the Sun and Moon. Eratosthenes formulated the simple proportional formula, by mathematic abstraction strategies based on perfect sphere and a simple mathematical rule as well as in the geometry in this world. The Earth must be a sphere by a logical and empirical argument of Aristotle, based on the Greek word symmetry including harmony and beauty of form. We discuss the justification of these three bold assumptions for mathematical abstraction of Eratosthenes's experiment for calculating the circumference of the Earth, and justifying all three assumptions from historical perspective for mathematics and science education. Also it is important that the simplicity about the measurement of the earth's circumstance at the history of science.

A Study on the Order of Mixed Calculations in Korean Elementary School Mathematics (우리나라 초등학교 수학에서의 혼합계산 순서에 대한 연구)

  • Ko, Jun Seok;Choi, Jong Hyeon;Lee, Seung Eun;Park, Kyo Sik
    • Journal of Elementary Mathematics Education in Korea
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    • v.21 no.3
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    • pp.531-546
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    • 2017
  • This study explores the basis for determining priority among the four arithmetical operations in order to provide useful pedagogical content knowledge for teaching the order of operations. The study also discusses the perspective for viewing the order of operations. It presents the following five suggestions based on the results of the discussion. First, teachers should be made to realize that the same result can be obtained on calculation even when subtraction and division are performed first in mixed operations of addition and subtraction and mixed operations of multiplication and division. Second, teachers should understand why the rule of calculating sequentially from the left side of an equation has become customary. Third, teachers should be offered an explanation for the driver of the rule setting that multiplication takes precedence over addition in mixed operations of multiplication and addition. Fourth, the significance of the quantity within parenthesis must be emphasized to teachers. Fifth, teachers must gain an in-depth understanding about the order of operations by getting a description of all the customary and conceptual perspectives on the order of operations when describing the same in the teacher's guide.

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A Case study on the Validity Review of the Problem Solving Process of Elemetary $5^{th}$ graders (초등학교 5학년 학생들의 문제해결 과정의 타당성 검토 활동에 관한 사례연구)

  • Park, Ji-Yeon;Park, Young-Hee
    • The Mathematical Education
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    • v.51 no.3
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    • pp.265-280
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    • 2012
  • This study aims to provide implications from mathematics education perspective by designing a process of 'validity review on the problem solving process', and then, by analyzing the results. In the result of analysis on the features of children's thinking in accordance with 4 stages of problem solving, children's thinking was equally observed in every stage rather than intensively observed in one stage, and reflective thinking related to important elements from each stage of problem solving process was observed. In the result of analysis of changes in description for problem solving process, there was a difference in the aspects of changes by children's knowledge level in mathematics, however, the activity of validity review on problem solving process in overall induced positive changes in children's description, especially the changes in problem solving process of children. Through the result of this study, we could see that the validity review on problem solving process promotes children's reflective thinking and enables meta-cognition thus has a positive influence on children's description of problem solving process.

An analysis of preservice mathematics teachers' reading of curriculum materials: Focused on conditional probability (예비 수학교사들의 교육과정 자료 해석: 조건부확률을 중심으로)

  • Ku, Nayoung;Tak, Byungjoo;Choi, Inyong;Kang, Hyun-Young
    • The Mathematical Education
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    • v.58 no.3
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    • pp.347-365
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    • 2019
  • It is important to pay attention to how teachers recognize and use curriculum materials in order to link written curriculum and enacted curriculum. In this study, 90 preservice mathematics teachers were surveyed to identify their perspective and reading of curriculum materials. Especially, we focused on the curriculum documents, textbooks, and teachers' guidebooks containing the concept of conditional probability which is addressed in highschool mathematics curriculum. The various misconceptions of conditional probability were reported in the many researches, and there are multiple methods to introduce conditional probability in mathematics classes. As a result, curriculum materials have some limits to be used as they are and considered to be reconstructable by participants, but their curriculum reading were mainly classified to be descriptive and evaluative, not to be interpretive. However, unlike curriculum documents, textbooks and teachers' guidebooks were partially interpreted by participants using their knowledge of conditional probability. The purpose of this study is to investigate the profession of mathematics teachers in terms of curriculum implementation. We expect that this study will provide a basic framework for analyzing mathematics teachers' works and suggest some implications for the professional development of mathematics teachers.

Professional development of an experienced teacher through research community activities: focusing on task modification and implementation to facilitate mathematical creativity (연구공동체 활동을 통한 한 경력교사의 전문성 신장 : 수학적 창의성 촉진을 위한 대푯값 과제의 변형과 실행을 중심으로)

  • Moon, SungJae;Noh, JeongWon;Ro, YeSol;Lee, KyeongHwa
    • The Mathematical Education
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    • v.58 no.4
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    • pp.545-566
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    • 2019
  • The purpose of this study is to show that research community activities can contribute to the professional development in respect of average concepts and mathematical creativity. In the community, activities were undertaken to transform the existing task into the task that contributes to the manifestation of creativity. In this process, researchers tried to connect the theory with the practice of the class, and the teacher acted as an active learner. The findings show that the teacher who had difficulty in teaching average could overcome difficulties, and also derived the way of task modification and strategies necessary for teaching average. The modified task induced improvements in students' achievement levels, which led to change in teachers' perspective on the relationship between mathematical creativity and learning. Research community activities have been shown to have contributed to improvements with regard to both teaching the average and promoting mathematical creativity.

An Analysis on Communication in a Math Class - Based on Verbal Interactions - (수학수업에서 의사소통 분석 -언어상호작용을 중심으로-)

  • Shin, Joon-Sik
    • Education of Primary School Mathematics
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    • v.10 no.1 s.19
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    • pp.15-28
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    • 2007
  • From a social constructivists' perspective, knowledge is not transmitted by language but it is constructed by social interactions with others. That is, it is viewed in social constructivism that learning is a process in which knowledge is constructed by communicative interactions with more capable others. In this vein, a class might be analyzed and characterized in terms of interactional patterns of teacher-student and student-student in class. For this, a primary math class was selected and observed and it was analyzed by the Flanders category system to investigate the effects of the math teaching based on verbal interactions on the learning of math. The class was taught in a teacher-centered and direct way but in the class math knowledge was taught through univocal communications in the form of question-answer. The results of this study appeared to suggest that verbal interactional patterns should take place frequently in math teaching in the sequence of a teacher's questions$\to$students' extensive responses $\to$ positive feedback for the students' responses by the teacher $\to$ the acceptance of the students' responses $\to$ the teacher's explanation or students' questions. In other words, math might be taught more effectively through the verbal discourse patterns proposed in this study.

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An Analysis of Descriptions about the History of Mathematics in the 2015 Mathematics Textbooks and Teacher Guides for Elementary School Level (2015 초등 수학 교과서 및 지도서의 수학사 기술내용 분석)

  • Park, Mingu
    • Communications of Mathematical Education
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    • v.36 no.1
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    • pp.171-199
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    • 2022
  • In this study, we review contents to supplement the descriptions of the history of mathematics in the 2015 mathematics textbooks and teacher guides for the elementary school level and offer our opinion on them. For this purpose, we conducted a literature review on 24 types of 2015 mathematics textbooks and teacher guides for the elementary school level. The results of this study are as follows: A total of 10 topics were found whose contents were supplemented with descriptions. They were the "Arithmetic of the Ancient Egyptians," the "A'h-mosè Papyrus in Mathematics Textbooks of the Ancient Egyptians," "The Old Akkadian Square Band in Mesopotamia," "The Relationship of the Old Babylonians in Mesopotamia with the Angle," "The Pi of the Ancient Egyptians and the Old Babylonians," "The Square Roots 2 of the Ancient Egyptians and the Old Babylonians," "The Relationship of the Islamites with the Decimal Fraction," "Two Arguments for the Roots of the Golden Ratio," "The Relationship of Archimedes with the Exhaustion Method," and "The Design of Flats." Then, their specific supplements were suggested. It is expected that this will overcome the perspective of the history of the Axial Age and acknowledge and accept the perspective evidencing the transfer of mathematical culture from Ancient Egypt and Old Babylonia to Ancient Greece and Hellenism, and then through Central Asia to Europe.

Good Mathematics Instruction: Hearing Teachers' Voices (좋은 수학 수업에 대한 초등 교사의 인식 조사)

  • Kwon, Mi-Sun;Pang, Jeon-Suk
    • Communications of Mathematical Education
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    • v.23 no.2
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    • pp.231-253
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    • 2009
  • This paper investigated the views of effective mathematics instruction on the part of teachers. The study was carried out a survey with 223 elementary school teachers in Korea. The questionnaire consisted of the following 4 main categories with a total of 48 factors: (a) the curriculum and content, (b) teaching and learning, (c) classroom environment and atmosphere, and (d) assessment. Some ideas teachers revealed about what would enable good mathematics teaching coincided with previous research. Specifically, teachers agreed with the idea of consideration of students' individual differences or focus on concepts. However, there were differences with regard to the use of technology and the importance of learning environment, which have been emphasized in mathematics education literature. Considering that the teacher plays a key role in implementing good instruction, this paper emphasizes us to attend to teachers' perspectives in order to initiate good teaching at the actual classroom.

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