1. An exploratory mixed methods study about teacher candidates' descriptions of children's confusion, productive struggle, and mistakes in an elementary mathematics methods course.
- Author
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Kalinec-Craig, Crystal and Rios, Anthony
- Subjects
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STUDENT teachers , *LEARNING , *TEACHER education , *PARENT-teacher conferences , *SENTIMENT analysis , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Recognizing and describing children's mathematical thinking in humanizing ways, especially when students engage in confusion, productive struggle, and mistakes, is a complex and challenging process. This paper describes an exploratory, mixed-methods study about how elementary teacher candidates (TCs) describe children's thinking as a right to exercise and to value their humanity when learning mathematics. The study analyzed transcripts from 64 TCs' summative assessments, which consisted of mock parent-teacher conferences (MPTC). Findings suggest that TCs described children's confusion, productive struggle, and mistakes (RotL 1 and 2) as: a teacher's observation, an opportunity for students to correct or clarify their thinking, an opportunity for teachers to adjust instruction or provide support, and as a normal part of the learning process. More importantly, some TCs reassured children that learners have fundamental rights when learning mathematics, especially when feeling confused and claiming a mistake. Implications for research and teacher education are discussed. Keywords: Elementary, teacher education, mathematics, mixed methods, rehumanizing, Torres' rights of the learner • Topic modeling and sentiment analysis helps to quantify and describe valence that arises from large amounts of text. • 32 TCs identified children's confusion, generalized struggle, and mistakes (Torres' RotL 1 and 2) in their MPTC across 50 instances. • Some TCs described children's confusion and mistakes as rights to exercise, a potential rehumanizing stance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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