• Title/Summary/Keyword: 초등수학교실

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The Inquiry of Change of Mathematical Beliefs and Attitude in Elementary Cooperative Learning Class. (협동학습에서의 초등학생 수학적 신념 및 태도 변화 연구)

  • 서관석;안진수
    • School Mathematics
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    • v.5 no.4
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    • pp.541-553
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    • 2003
  • The purposes of this study are to look into the changing processes of mathematical beliefs and attitudes of the students and to propose the plans how to manage cooperative learning, what can contribute to cognitive affective domains of mathematics learning in applying STAD-based cooperative loaming to mathematics class. So we, the researchers performed cooperative learning in the fifth grade of elementary school and did the exams of mathematical beliefs and attitudes, interviews, supplementary Questions. And students showed meaningful changes in 'the need of cooperative learning', 'critical thinking', 'the acceptance of thoughts of others'. Meanwhile, there were possibilities what all the members of one group can't recognize their errors in STAD, so we proposed 'Tongsinsa'. And we presented concrete methods how to reconstruct groups and somethings to consider when students are not satisfied with the group activities.

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The Research on PBL Application in Mathematics Method Course (문제중심학습(PBL)에서 초등예비교사들의 문제해결과정)

  • Lee, Kwang-Ho;Jang, Eun-Ha
    • Education of Primary School Mathematics
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    • v.15 no.2
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    • pp.91-106
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    • 2012
  • This study reports pre-service teachers' problem solving process on the problem-based learning(PBL) employed in an elementary mathematics method course. The subjects were 6 pre-service teachers(students). The data were collected from classroom observation. The research results were described by problem solving stages. In understanding the problem stage, students identified what problem stand for and made a problem solving planned sheet. In curriculum investigation stage, students went through investigation and re-investigation process for solving the task. In problem solving stage, students selected the best strategy for solving the task and presented and shared about problem solving results.

Concrete Class Plan for a Statistical Project of 5th Graders in Elementary School Using Infographics (인포그래픽을 활용한 초등학교 5학년 통계 프로젝트 수업의 구체화 방안)

  • Kim, Ji Hye;Song, Sang Hun
    • Journal of Elementary Mathematics Education in Korea
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    • v.23 no.1
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    • pp.75-92
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    • 2019
  • The 2015 revised mathematics curriculum encourages students to use graphs in newspapers and the Internet as materials when teaching graphs, and to experience a series of statistical problem-solving processes that collect, classify, organize, graph and interpret data. The graphs that the students learn through traditional textbooks were a single type of graphs. In particular, the graphs of the 5th and 6th grade groups were only increased in numbers, but the basic concepts were repeated in the 3rd and 4th grades. Fortunately, from the 2009 revision curriculum, it is possible to select the graph suitable for the situation while comparing the characteristics of some graphs. In most cases, the graphs used in the real world are presented in the form of a compounded infographics. The purpose of this study is to analyze and analyze the manifestations of information processing competence elements emphasized in the 2015 revised curriculum through the statistical project class using the informal graphic in the fifth grade of elementary school. And we suggested a concrete class plan.

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Analysis of the Effects of Discourse-Based Math Instructions (담화 중심 수학 수업의 효과 분석)

  • Hong, Keum-Hee;Choi, Jae-Ho
    • Journal of Elementary Mathematics Education in Korea
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    • v.15 no.3
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    • pp.559-577
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    • 2011
  • The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of discourse-based math instructions on the students' mathematical attitudes and learning achievements by providing fifth graders with an opportunity to take active part in learning during math classes and applying discourse-based math instructions, which are to expand the speaking experiences as the most fundamental way to express ideas in communication. Those research efforts led to the following results: First, the discourse-based math instructions turned out to have positive influences on flexibility, will power, curiosity, reflection, and value of mathematical attitudes. When the results were reviewed before and after the instructions without considering the subvariables of attitude, there were statistically significant differences(p<0.01), which indicates that the discourse-based math instructions exerted very positive effects on the students mathematical attitudes. Second, there were no statistically significant effects in learning achievements between the experimental and comparative group, but the experimental group, which recorded low mean scores in the pre-test, increased their mean scores by 3.81 points in the post-test, which suggests that the discourse-based math instructions had positive influences on them. Third, the subjects' responses on the questionnaire on discourse-based instructions reveal that the discourse-based math instructional provided them with an opportunity to explore solutions in various ways. In short, discourse-based math instructions have positive influences on mathematical attitudes and are effective in increasing communication ability.

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Analysis of Mathematical Communication in Building-Block Lessons for 2nd Graders (2학년 쌓기나무 수업에서의 수학적 의사소통 분석)

  • Chang, Hyewon
    • School Mathematics
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    • v.17 no.2
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    • pp.223-239
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    • 2015
  • This study focused on classroom dialogue for communicating spatial information which is supposed to be implemented through learning activities using building-blocks. Even though mathematics textbooks for $2^{nd}$ graders have activities which require abilities of explaining and understanding some spatial information, we know few about how mathematical communication between teacher and students or among students and which strategies are more effective. For this reason, two building-block lessons for $2^{nd}$ graders were observed. The characteristics of teachers' instruction and students' explanation were identified and the mathematical communication between teachers and students or among students was analyzed. As a result, mains factors of impeding students' explanation and understanding were induced and the types of their communication were classified. Based on these results, several teaching strategies for effective communication in buildingblock lessons were suggested.

Considerations on Mathematics as a Practice (실천으로서의 수학에 대한 소고)

  • Jeong Eun-Sil
    • Journal of Elementary Mathematics Education in Korea
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    • v.1 no.1
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    • pp.87-98
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    • 1997
  • A practice is classified into the practice as a content and the practice as a method. The former means that the practical nature of mathematical knowledge itself should be a content of mathematics and the latter means that one should teach the mathematical knowledge in such a way as the practical nature is not damaged. The practical nature of mathematics means mathematician's activity as it is actually done. Activities of the mathematician are not only discovering strict proofs or building axiomatic system but informal thinking activities such as generalization, analogy, abstraction, induction etc. In this study, it is found that the most instructive ones for the future users of mathematics are such practice as content. For the practice as a method, students might learn, by becoming apprentice mathematicians, to do what master mathematicians do in their everyday practice. Classrooms are cultural milieux and microsoms of mathematical culture in which there are sets of beliefs and values that are perpetuated by the day-to-day practices and rituals of the cultures. Therefore, the students' sense of ‘what mathematics is really about’ is shaped by the culture of school mathematics. In turn, the sense of what mathematics is really all about determines how the students use the mathematics they have learned. In this sense, the practice on which classroom instruction might be modelled is that of mathematicians at work. To learn mathematics is to enter into an ongoing conversation conducted between practitioners who share common language. So students should experience mathematics in a way similar to the way mathematicians live it. It implies a view of mathematics classrooms as a places in which classroom activity is directed not simply toward the acquisition of the content of mathematics in the form of concepts and procedures but rather toward the individual and collaborative practice of mathematical thinking.

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Analysis of Elementary Mathematics Teaching Material Using Storytelling Based on the Perspective of Constructivism (구성주의 관점에서 스토리텔링을 활용한 초등 수학 수업 자료 분석)

  • Lee, Sumin;Kim, Jinho
    • Education of Primary School Mathematics
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    • v.17 no.3
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    • pp.205-230
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    • 2014
  • New teaching and learning theory on various aspects about class is needed to implement education which reflects constructivism, ideally. For an ideal learner-centered mathematics class, tangible and intangible elements related to education(view of knowledge, view of leaner, teacher's role, evaluation, the form of class, learning, teaching material, etc.) should be integrated from a constructive perspective and especially, teaching material has to be premised on that learners have intellectual abilities to construct knowledge themselves, and reflect integrity of knowledge, diversity and others, and contain open attributes. In addition to this, teaching material should have characteristics different from those when objective epistemology applies, so there is a need to analyze whether teaching material has those characteristics. For this, this study compared and analyzed <1. Three-Digit Numbers> which belongs to the domain of numbers and operations out of the units of mathematics(3) textbook of the 2009 revised curriculum for the first and second grade that first introduced story-telling, and <3. Understanding of Place Values> for the second grade of constructive math class used in the U.S.

An Analysis on the Problem Solving of Korean and American 3rd Grade Students in the Addition and Subtraction with Natural Numbers (한국과 미국 초등학교 3학년 학생들의 자연수 덧셈과 뺄셈 문제해결 분석)

  • Lee, Dae Hyun
    • Education of Primary School Mathematics
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    • v.19 no.3
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    • pp.177-191
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    • 2016
  • Students can calculate the addition and subtraction problem using informal knowledge before receiving the formal instruction. Recently, the value that a computation lesson focus on the understanding and developing the various strategies is highlighted by curriculum developers as well as in reports. Ideally, a educational setting and classroom culture reflected students' learning and problem solving strategies. So, this paper analyzed the similarity and difference with respect to the numeric sentence and word problem in the addition and subtraction. The subjects for the study were 100 third-grade Korean students and 68 third-grade American students. Researcher developed the questionnaire in the addition and subtraction and used it for the survey. The following results have been drawn from this study. The computational ability of Korean students was higher than that of American students in both the numeric sentence and word problem. And it was revealed the differences of the strategies which were used problem solving process. Korean students tended to use algorithms and numbers' characters and relations, but American students tended to use the drawings and algorithms with drawings.

The use of an educational program for elementary mathematical thinking Effects (교육용 프로그램의 사용이 초등학교 수학적 사고에 미치는 영향)

  • Lee, Won-Jong
    • Proceedings of the KAIS Fall Conference
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    • 2012.05a
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    • pp.258-260
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    • 2012
  • 본 논문은 교육용 프로그램이 학업성취도에 유의미한 영향을 미치는지 알아보고자 설계되었다. 실험은 서울특별시에 위치한 I초등학교 4학년 2개 학급 총 60명을 연구 대상으로 하여 각각 실험집단과 통제 집단으로 나누었다. 실험처치는 2011년 9월부터 10월까지 실험집단에는 스크래치 프로그램을 활용한 교육을, 통제집단에는 교실에서 판서 수업을 진행하였다. 측정한 결과 실험집단에서 유의미한 결과가 나타났다.

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Exploring the Relationships Among Teacher Questions, Turn-Taking Patterns, and Student Talks in Mathematics Classrooms (수학 교실에서 교사 질문, 말하기 차례 규칙, 학생 발화 사이의 관계 분석)

  • Hwang, Sunghwan
    • Journal of the Korean School Mathematics Society
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    • v.22 no.4
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    • pp.439-460
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    • 2019
  • In this study, we examined classroom interaction to explore the relationships among teacher questions, turn-taking patterns, and student talks in mathematics classrooms. We analyzed lessons given by three elementary teachers (two first-grade teachers and one second-grade teacher) who worked in the same school using a conversation-analytic approach. We observed individual classrooms three times in a year. The results revealed that when teachers provided open-ended questions, such as "why and how" questions and "agree and disagree" questions, and used a non-IRE pattern (teacher initiation-student response-teacher feedback; Mehan, 1979), students more actively engaged in classroom discourse by justifying their ideas and refuting others' thinking. Conversely, when teachers provided closed-ended questions, such as "what" questions, and used an IRE pattern, students tended to give short answers focusing on only one point. The findings suggested teachers should use open-ended questions and non-IRE turn-taking patterns to create an effective math-talk learning community. In addition, school administrators and mathematics educators should support teachers to acquire practical knowledge regarding this approach.