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The Variation of University Physics Students’ Experience of Plus and Minus Signs in 1D Vector-kinematics Revisited African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2022-07-19 Moa Eriksson, Elias Euler, Cedric Linder, Urban Eriksson, Nadaraj Govender
This article revisits and expands upon a previous phenomenographic study characterising the qualitatively different ways in which South African undergraduate physics students may experience the use of +/– signs in one-dimensional kinematics (1DK). We find the original categorisation as applicable for interpreting Swedish university-level students’ responses to 1DK questions. However, by way of a typology
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Zambian Secondary School Biology Teachers’ Profiles of Planned Topic-specific Pedagogical Content Knowledge for Teaching Respiration African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2022-07-19 Thumah Mapulanga, Gilbert Nshogoza, Ameyaw Yaw
Teachers’ pedagogical content knowledge (PCK) has the potential to influence lesson planning, teaching and students’ academic performance in science. Since PCK is embodied in lesson planning (as planned PCK), this study employed the multiple-case design to describe in-depth the biology teachers’ profiles of planned topic-specific PCK (plTSPCK) for teaching respiration. While the target population comprised
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Students’ Experiences on the Remote Teaching and Learning of Linear Algebra During COVID-19 African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2022-07-03 Gafari Lukumon, Aneshkumar Maharaj
The purpose of this study, conducted with 44 participants, was to explore their experiences of learning linear algebra using the online content and materials during COVID-19. The conceptual framework was guided by the notion of social presence and connectivisim in the context of remote learning. The study used a questionnaire comprising closed and open-ended items where students were asked about their
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In Memoriam: Audrey Msimanga African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2022-05-04
(2021). In Memoriam: Audrey Msimanga. African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education: Vol. 25, No. 3, pp. 282-284.
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Understandings About Scientific Inquiry in a South African School Prioritizing STEM African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2022-05-02 Estelle Gaigher, Annemarie Hattingh, Judith Lederman, †Norman Lederman
This paper reports on a case study of South African Grade 12 learners’ views about scientific inquiry. The study focuses on a non-fee-paying government school that receives curricular support and resources to specifically develop Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) teaching in a low socioeconomic setting. Data were collected using the Views About Scientific Inquiry (VASI) questionnaire
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Content Areas and Performance of Students in the Old Mutual Mathematics Olympiad in Malawi African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2022-04-27 Khumbo Kumwenda, Atipatsa Kaminga
The Old Mutual Mathematics Olympiad (OMMO) in Malawi is a national mathematics competition open to all final year secondary school students. In this paper, we analyse the results of the preliminary round of the competition from 2015 to 2020. We developed seven content areas for the OMMO based on core elements of the Malawi secondary school mathematics curriculum. We found that the OMMO is dominated
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Exploring Particular Learner Factors Associated with South African Mathematics Learners’ Achievement: Gender Gap or Not African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2022-04-24 Sarah Bansilal, Thabo Lephoto
Mathematics is a gateway to science-related careers and all stakeholders want to improve the achievement levels in mathematics. In this study we use data from the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study 2015 to investigate the association between the learner situational factors of gender, grade level age appropriateness, school location and test language familiarity with the mathematics
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In Memoriam: Manono Poo African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2022-04-27
(2021). In Memoriam: Manono Poo. African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education: Vol. 25, No. 3, pp. 280-281.
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Mathematics Mediational Means and Learner Centredness: Insights from ‘traditional’ Malawian Secondary School Geometry Lessons African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2022-04-24 Lisnet Mwadzaangati, Jill Adler, Mercy Kazima
We re-examine a Malawian teacher’s lessons which, using the framework of mathematic problem-solving developed by Polya, the typology of levels of task demand from Stein and colleagues and Malawi’s description of learner-centred education (LCE), were described as teacher-centred and evaluated as ‘not good’. We studied seven video-recorded circle geometry lessons taught by the teacher and analysed these
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Developing Student Teachers’ Conceptions of the Nature of Science: An Assessment of a Pre-Service Science Teacher Programme in Tanzania African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2022-03-09 Mjege Kinyota, Beatha Simon Rwimo
The importance of enabling student-teachers to acquire informed conceptions of the Nature of Science (NOS) is widely emphasised. Hence, this study investigated the effectiveness of a science pre-service teacher education programme of one university in Tanzania in enabling student-teachers to acquire informed conceptions of NOS as stages in a Learning Progressions model. We employed a comparative impact
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An Analysis of Teachers’ Explanatory Talk That Supports Learning of Standard Units of Length in Standard 4 in Malawi African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2022-02-14 Liveness Mwale
This study sought to analyse, using the Mathematics Discourse in Instruction framework, teachers’ explanatory talk when introducing standard units of length in standard 4 in Malawi. The study analysed teachers’ use of content and pedagogical practices for introducing standard units of length and how that made the concept of standard units of length accessible to learners. Qualitative data was collected
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Patterned Differences in Grade 3 Mathematics Teachers’ Working With Representations Across Two Language Contexts: Implications for Learning Opportunities African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2022-02-04 Manono Poo
In this paper, illustrative excerpts from mathematics lessons are analysed to examine mathematical and multilingual moves between representations within Sepedi and English medium classrooms. Duval’s theory of representational registers and the literature on multilingual practices help foreground similarities within and differences between the instructional practices of four teachers—two teaching in
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Engendering Students’ Epistemic Agency in a Mathematics Class at a University in South Africa African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2022-01-25 Kabelo Chuene
This article draws on the notion of epistemic agency to illustrate how the enactment of shared epistemic agency is enabled or hindered in a mathematics classroom for student teachers. I used data from an ethnographic study that was conducted in a third-year class of mathematics for educators. Data was drawn from verbal interactions that took place between mathematics student teachers, and between student
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The Relationship Between Cognitive Activation, Self-Efficacy, Achievement Emotions and (Meta)cognitive Learning Strategies Among Ugandan Biology Learners African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2022-01-20 Margaret Ekatushabe, Florien Nsanganwimana, Charles M. Muwonge, Joseph Ssenyonga
According to the control-value theory of achievement emotions, the influence of cognitive activation teaching strategies on students’ effective use of Cognitive and Meta-Cognitive (CMC) learning strategies is mediated by control appraisals (e.g. self-efficacy) and achievement emotions (i.e. enjoyment and boredom). However, there is limited and contrasting empirical evidence to support this assertion
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Science Teachers’ Experiences when Implementing Problem-based Learning in Rural Schools African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-10-19 Ali Osman, Jeanne Kriek
Problem-based learning (PBL) is considered to be an effective teaching and learning strategy as it leads to longer retention of concepts learnt, improves problem-solving skills and enhances critical thinking. However, teachers often find it difficult to implement as they do not receive guidance during their initial training. A professional development intervention lasting four weekends was organised
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Semiotic Aspects of Differential Equations: Analytical and Graphical Competency in the USA and Tunisia African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-11-30 Rahim Kouki, Barry J. Griffiths
In this article we present the results of an investigation into semiotic aspects of an introductory differential equations class from two countries. In order to perform a comparative analysis, students in the USA and Tunisia were given common questions on their midterm exams that examined analytical and graphical competencies. Our results indicate that across both classes, the ability of the students
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How Pre-service Teachers Reflect on their own Mathematics Teaching Practice Compared with the Practice of Others African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-11-10 Samukeliso Chikiwa, Mellony Graven
Reflective practice is a crucial element of professional growth that is gaining in popularity in teacher education, yet the ability to reflect is a skill that is neither natural nor easy to develop. This paper reports on an investigation that sought to establish if pre-service teachers at a South African university – in the process of learning to reflect on practice through analysing video-recorded
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The Effect of PhET Simulation vs. Phenomenon-based Experiential Learning on Students’ Integration of Motion Along Two Independent Axes in Projectile Motion African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-10-03 Taurayi Willard Chinaka
Research in the past decades has repeatedly revealed that first year university students struggle to understand two-dimensional projectile motion concepts. In contrast to high school, projectile motion frequently makes use of components and it requires at least a basic understanding of trigonometry concepts. To follow the lessons and generate conceptual understanding in two-dimensional projectile motion
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Supporting Tanzanian Students’ Academic Language Proficiency by Inquiry-based learning of Invertebrate Systematic African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-09-26 Opanga David, Venuste Nsengimana
The purpose of this study was to assess how the Inquiry Based Learning approach supports the development of students’ academic language proficiency in invertebrate systematic. The study was framed by Halliday’s sociolinguistic approach to learning. A total of 50 classroom observation sessions at 10 schools were conducted: 10 before and 40 after the intervention. Twenty purposively selected teachers
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Relationships between High School Teachers’ Understanding and their Reported Practices of Inquiry-based Pedagogy in Science Classrooms in Nigeria African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-08-31 Ayodele Abosede Ogegbo
This research examines the relationship between high school teachers’ understanding and reported practices of inquiry-based pedagogy (IBP) in science classrooms in Nigeria. A sample of 11 science teachers from an education district in Lagos, Nigeria, was chosen for this case study. Data were collected using a semi-structured questionnaire, which combined closed Likert-scale items (analysed using descriptive
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Secondary School Students’ Motivation Profiles for Physics Learning: Relations with Cognitive Learning Strategies, Gender, Attitudes and Individual Interest African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-08-12 Diana Kwarikunda, Ulrich Schiefele, Joseph Ssenyonga, Charles Magoba Muwonge
For efficient and effective pedagogical interventions to address Uganda’s alarmingly poor performance in Physics, it is vital to understand students’ motivation patterns for Physics learning. Latent profile analysis (LPA)—a person-centred approach—can be used to investigate these motivation patterns. Using a three-step approach to LPA, we sought to answer the following research questions: RQ1, which
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Development of Teachers’ PCK for a Scientific Inquiry-based Teaching Approach in Namibia’s Rural Schools African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-04-30 Ester Shinana, Kenneth M. Ngcoza, Elizabeth Mavhunga
Research findings show that inquiry-based science education has positive effects in improving learning of both science content knowledge and scientific inquiry (SI) skills. As a result, various science curricula, including that of Namibia, recommend the use of an inquiry-based approach in science teaching. However, the implementation of an inquiry-based teaching approach remains a concern in Namibian
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Assessing the Suitability of the Adapted Teacher Assessment for Learning Questionnaire in the Kenyan Context African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-04-08 Ruth Nanjekho Wafubwa, Csaba Csíkos
This study focused on the assessment of the structural validity of the 28 item adapted Teacher Assessment for Learning Questionnaire (TAFL-Q) in the Kenyan context. The sample consisted of 180 mathematics teachers drawn from 50 secondary schools. Confirmatory factor analysis was used to confirm the hypothesised two-factor model of the original questionnaire. The analysis resulted in a poor fit to the
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Constructive Alignment for Deep Learning in Undergraduate Civil Engineering Education African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-05-19 Dillip Kumar Das
Attainment of competency is crucial for civil engineering students to solve socio-economic and environmental challenges and contribute to the development of a sustainable society by using engineering principles. Consequently, competency has become the measure of engineering graduates for which deep learning is essential. Constructive alignment has been argued to be vital for deep learning. The objective
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The Relationship Between Pre-service Teachers’ Spatial Experience and Spatial Visualisation at a Rural-based University African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-05-17 Petrus Jacobus Kok
Over several years, first-year pre-service education students regularly experienced difficulty with engineering graphics activities. Research has already established that these activities require the use of well-developed spatial visualisation which is, for the most part, determined by a persons’ spatial experience. The importance of this study was that very little is known about rural students’ spatial
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A Longitudinal Case Study of Mathematics and Mathematical Literacy Achievement of Boys at a High Quintile School in South Africa African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-06-06 Deborah Lynn Fair, Angela Elisabeth Stott
Little is known about longitudinal profiles of mathematics achievement spanning all phases of basic education of the same learners. This would be useful for identifying crucial points for intervention and informing learner subject choices. This research was aimed at establishing such a profile for boys attending a quintile 5 single gender school. Learners’ promotion marks across eight cohorts from
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Developing Topic-specific PCK in Chemical Equilibrium in a Chemistry PGCE Class: Feasible Or Not? African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-06-06 Mamohato Makhechane, Elizabeth Mavhunga
Pedagogical content knowledge is considered a valuable knowledge base for all science teachers. Thus, promoting its development in all pre-service teacher programmes including a short 1 year Physical Science postgraduate certificate in education (PGCE) course is desirable. This paper focuses on the comparison of topic-specific pedagogical content knowledge (TSPCK) at a level of planning to teach between
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A Physical Computing Approach to the Introduction of Computer Programming among a Group of Pre-service Teachers African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-05-31 Reginald Gerald Govender, Desmond Wesley Govender
The emphasis on programming and robotics owing to the unfolding of the Fourth Industrial Revolution on the African continent has led the South African National Department of Education to propose a new subject in Grades R to 9. Hence, the training and development of pre-service teachers is crucial so that they can respond to the skills needed in the Digital Age. This preliminary study set out to explore
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The Effectiveness of Teaching Energy in a Secondary School Using the “Factory of Ideas” Teaching Approach African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-03-17 Sechaba Koma, Ts’epo Mokuku, Tiisetso J. Makatjane, Christel Balck, Jan Sermeus
This study investigated the extent to which the proposed Factory of Ideas (FOI) teaching approach impacted on students’ understanding of energy based on their prior knowledge. The FOI is a didactic approach that, unlike the classic cognitive conflict approach, employs a variety of activities to offer students a scientific conception for comparison with their own, and to expose students to several contexts
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Development of Science Teachers’ PCK About Waves Through Training in the Use of the Ripple Tank Apparatus African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-03-17 Bronia Roxane Vollebregt, Estelle Gaigher, Coréne Coetzee
This study investigated the effect of in-service training in the use of the ripple tank equipment on science teachers’ pedagogical content knowledge (PCK) about the topic of waves. Three Grade 10 Physical Sciences teachers participated in this qualitative case study. The Refined Consensus Model informed the conceptual framework of this study, considering PCK at a topic level within each of the three
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Science Competence-based Curriculum Implementation in Rwanda: A Multiple Case Study of the Relationship between a School’s Profile of Implementation and its Capacity to Innovate African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-03-12 Théophile Nsengimana, Leon R. Mugabo, Hiroaki Ozawa, Pheneas Nkundabakura
In order to prepare Rwandan citizens for a competitive world, a competence-based curriculum (CBC) has been implemented since 2016. The problem addressed by this study is “under which conditions will the implementation of the intended science curriculum be realised in classroom”. Framed by the Rogan and Grayson theory of curriculum implementation, a multiple case study was conducted to explore the relationships
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Appropriation and Use of a Modelling and Simulation Tool in Mechanical Design Learning African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-12-24 Youssoupha Gueye, Hamid Abouchadi, Mourad Abouelala, Mourad Taha Janan
This paper presents the results of a study on the integration of modelling and simulation tools in mechanical design. Indeed, optimisation of the design process often uses modelling and simulation tools in mechanical design activities. Thus, to meet the needs of the labour market, training situations in this field use communication and information techniques. In particular, digital tools are used for
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The Difference Between Attitudinal Factors Influencing Success of Commerce and Computer Science Students at a South African University African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-12-03 Mudaray Marimuthu, Deepak Kumar, Mishaan Chhagan
Software is a vital resource for modern life. For software to be successful, programming skills are of the utmost importance. These skills are used both by programmers and also by systems analysts and designers during the phases of software development. Therefore, both technical and non-technical stakeholders within the software development process need to understand programming. Evidence from the
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Using GeoGebra to Address Students’ Misconceptions about the Transformation of Algebraic Hyperbola Functions African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-12-24 Abongile Ngwabe, Clyde Felix
The literature shows that the integration of technological tools, like GeoGebra, has the potential to improve the teaching and learning of mathematics. The aim of this study was to see whether GeoGebra could be used to address identified, systematic misconceptions that National Certificate Vocational (NCV) students hold about the effects of parameters a and q on the transformation of hyperbola functions
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Primary School Children's Counting and Number Composition Processes from Two Pilot Studies in Urban Schools in Zambia African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-12-24 Nagisa Nakawa, Satoshi Kusaka, Masato Kosaka, Koji Watanabe, Takuya Baba
One of the biggest challenges for primary school children is moving beyond the use of counting in calculation. The purpose of this study was to investigate how Zambian Grade 1 to Grade 4 children at primary school see a group of 10 as an effective pattern and structure with the given concrete material. The study consisted of three phases consisting of two pilot studies and the main study, during which
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Teacher–Textbook Relationships in Mathematics in Contexts of Limited Resources African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-12-16 Moneoang Leshota
This paper examines how seven teachers working in contexts of limited resources used the prescribed textbook for teaching, and the kinds of teacher–textbook relationships forged in the interactions. The study employs a sociocultural perspective to explore the processes by which teachers mobilise the affordances of the textbook to the teacher’s practice, thereby advancing a particular way for studying
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Teachers’ Understanding of the Link between the Atomic Theory and the Mole Concept African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-12-07 Emmanuel Mweshi, Onesmus Munyati, Kabunga Nachiyunde
The mole concept is one of the fundamental concepts in chemistry. However, a number of studies carried out in various countries have shown that teachers and learners face many difficulties in teaching and learning the concept. One of the underlying sources of teaching and learning difficulties of the mole concept identified in literature is the gap in understanding the link between atomic theory and
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School and Individual Predictors of Mathematics Achievement in South Africa: The Mediating Role of Learner Aspirations African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2021-02-02 A. Wilson Fadiji, V. Reddy
Extant literature has demonstrated the importance of individual and school-related factors in improving mathematics achievement. Despite this, there is still a gap in research to understand the mediating role of educational aspiration in mathematics achievement. The aim of the present study is to test the relationship between self-efficacy, school resources, positive school climate and mathematics
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Pre-service Teachers’ Visuospatial Cognition: 2D to 3D Transition African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-11-29 Petrus Jacobus Kok
This research focused on first-year university students’ visuospatial cognition in terms of producing three-dimensional (3D) representations of objects from two-dimensional (2D) views. The research was important since students often had difficulty with 2D to 3D transition activities. A synthesis from the literature established a 2D to 3D conceptual framework for an effective 2D to 3D transition. In
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Formulating a Modified Genetic Decomposition for the Concept of ‘Limit of a Sequence’ African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-11-23 Conilius Jaison Chagwiza, Aneshkumar Maharaj, Deonarain Brijlall
In this paper we focused on university mathematics students’ mental constructions on the concept limit of a sequence. The aim was to explore the nature of the mental constructions and to contribute to Action–Process–Object–Schema (APOS) theory in terms of instructional strategy for teaching limit of sequences. The belief that understanding students’ mental constructions in learning mathematics leads
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The Relationship between Motivation for, and Interest in, Learning Physics among Lower Secondary School Students in Uganda African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-11-23 Diana Kwarikunda, Ulrich Schiefele, Joseph Ssenyonga, Charles Magoba Muwonge
Motivation and interest affect students’ learning especially in Physics, a subject learners perceive as abstract. The present study was guided by three objectives: (a) to adapt and validate the Science Motivation Questionnaire (SMQ-II) for the Ugandan context; (b) to examine whether there are significant differences in motivation for learning Physics with respect to students’ gender; and (c) to establish
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Views on Inquiry-based Chemistry Teaching Practice: Linking Contextual Challenges and Specific Professional Development Needs in Some Tanzanian Schools African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-11-19 Baraka Gaitan Luvanga, Selina Thomas Mkimbili
This paper presents the findings of a study that explored the link between teachers’ views on the challenges to inquiry-based science teaching (IBST) practice in the chemistry classroom and their need for professional development. The study used a multiple case study design and collected data using interviews. Participants were purposively selected. In all, eight chemistry teachers in six schools participated
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Intersemiotic Complementarity in Namibian Physical Science Teachers’ Classroom Practice African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-11-08 Tomas Nakakuwa, Kavish Jawahar
The world we live in is increasingly multimodal, necessitating multiliteracy for learners to engage meaningfully with knowledge and skills. While verbal language is the primary medium for constructing, communicating and learning scientific knowledge and concepts, visuals can help learners to gain knowledge that they may not develop from verbal explanations alone. Verbal and visual semiotic modes have
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An Investigation into Pre-service Teachers’ Experiences While Transitioning from Scratch Programming to Procedural Programming African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-10-07 Fatimah Tijani, Ronel Callaghan, Rian de Villers
The use of Scratch programming in introducing text-based programming to novices at all levels of education has gained prominence in computer science but is still hardly known among pre-service teachers. With affordances of Scratch in learning text-based programming, we present an experience report on how we supported our first-year pre-service teachers’ learning of procedural programming concepts with
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Effectiveness of PhET Simulations and YouTube Videos to Improve the Learning of Optics in Rwandan Secondary Schools African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-10-01 Kizito Ndihokubwayo, Jean Uwamahoro, Irénée Ndayambaje
Effective teaching of physics requires the use of well-designed and diversified instructional tools such as multimedia throughout the teaching and learning process. The main objective of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of Physics Educational Technology (PhET) simulations and YouTube videos to improve the learning of optics in Rwandan secondary schools. The study was framed by the cognitive
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A Two-Eyed Seeing context-based approach for incorporating indigenous knowledge into school science teaching African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-09-30 Gilbert O. M. Onwu, Charles Mufundirwa
This paper is about using a ‘Two-Eyed Seeing’ approach as the process of co-learning for incorporating elements of indigenous knowledge into school science teaching. Two groups of 150 Form 3 integrated science learners drawn from six high schools in Mutare, Zimbabwe, comprised the study sample. One group of learners, the control group, was taught the concepts of forces in structures in the traditional
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What Grade 8–10 Learners from a Mathematics-and-Science-Focus School Value as Important in the Learning of Mathematics African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-09-28 Raeesa Asmail, Erica Dorethea Spangenberg, Viren Ramdhany
Mathematics is frequently considered as value-free, centring entirely on abstract reasoning. However, more often than not, the teaching of values in mathematics classrooms takes place implicitly through the actions of the teacher. The role values play in mathematics learning is also a growing area of interest and is now viewed by many as a contributing factor in the advancement of the quality of mathematics
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Impact of Practical Education Network on Students in Selected Ghanaian Junior High School Science Classrooms African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-09-25 Jacob J. Babb, Shari L. Stockero
Within the science education community, it is widely accepted that quality science instruction is focused on knowledge construction and inquiry. The Ghanaian education system has many hallmark issues that inhibit such instruction, however, including a pervasive teacher-centred pedagogy, lack of laboratory materials, and minimal support systems for teachers. The Practical Education Network (PEN) is
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Distance-education Student Teachers’ Views of Teaching Mathematics Problem Solving While on Teaching Practice African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-09-18 Piera Biccard
This study explores student teachers’ views regarding problem solving in mathematics classrooms. The participants in the study were Bachelor of Education students registered for their second year of teaching practice (at a distance institution) who were asked about their experiences of teaching a mandatory mathematics problem-solving lesson while on their teaching practice. The responses were mixed
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Development and Validation of a Test of In-service Science Teachers’ Epistemic Knowledge in Electricity and Magnetism Using Rasch Analysis African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-09-02 Getachew Tarekegn, Mekbib Alemu, Mesfin Taddesse, Per M. Kind
In physics education, assessments address various forms of scientific knowledge. Most of the existing test instruments emphasise the assessment of content knowledge. These tests fail to measure the epistemic aspects of science. Thus, assessing epistemic knowledge is a theme that demands investigation. This study applies Rasch analysis to help validate an epistemic knowledge test in electricity and
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Dialogic Teaching in a Teacher Education College: An Analysis of Teacher Educator and Pre-service Teacher Talk in Physics Classrooms African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-08-25 Hassen Worku, Mekbib Alemu
The purpose of this case study was to determine the functions of pre-service teachers’ talk and to explore how the teacher educator supports the development of conceptual understanding in a dialogic classroom setting. The participants in the study were a physics teacher educator who employed dialogic teaching to teach mechanics and 52 third-year pre-service teachers at a college of teacher education
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Grade 11 Rural Learners Understanding of Functions: A Commognition Perspective African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-08-17 Sihlobosenkosi Mpofu, Vimolan Mudaly
This paper reports on a study conducted with Grade 11 learners as participants, in four public high schools in a rural district of the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. The central objective was to investigate the mathematical discourses of Grade 11 learners related to the word, algebraic and graphic representations of asymptotes of the hyperbola and exponential functions. Commognition and social
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Comparing Pedagogical Content Knowledge Across Fundamental Concepts of Electrostatics: A Case of Three Pre-service Teachers African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-06-25 Ernest Nkosingiphile Mazibe, Estelle Gaigher, Corene Coetzee
It has recently been suggested that pedagogical content knowledge (PCK) has a concept-specific nature, beyond the topic-specific level of PCK. This paper reports a case study of three pre-service teachers’ reported PCK about three fundamental concepts within the topic of electrostatics, namely electrostatic force, electric field and electric field strength. The aim of the study was to compare the quality
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Threading Entrepreneurship Through the Design Process in Technology Education African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-05-03 Adri Du Toit
Technology as a school subject has extensive entrepreneurship potential, especially when combined with the practical production aspects that form part of the intended curriculum. The South African Senior Phase Technology curriculum is silent on the topic of entrepreneurship and as a result, this potential is not reaching learners in a country with high levels of youth unemployment. This paper endeavours
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An APOS Analysis of University Students’ Understanding of Derivatives: A Lesotho Case Study African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-05-03 Eunice Kolitsoe Moru
The derivative is a central concept in calculus and has applications in many disciplines. This study explored students’ understanding of derivatives with a particular focus on the graphical (geometric) representation. The participants were four Mathematics Honours students from a university in Lesotho. Data were generated from the written responses to five tasks and interviews, with all collection
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Effects of Dialogical Argumentation Instructional Model on Pre-service Teachers’ Ability to Solve Conceptual Mathematical Problems in Physics African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-01-02 Paul Nnanyereugo Iwuanyanwu, Meshach Bolaji Ogunniyi
The aim of the study was to determine the effects of a dialogical argumentation instructional model (DAIM) on pre-service teachers’ ability to solve conceptual maths-in-physics (MIP) problems. Using a quasi-experimental design the study included two equal groups of pre-service teachers (N = 40) to follow two instructional methods in which the experimental group was engaged in DAIM while the control
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Identifying Effective Mathematics Teaching: Some Questions for Research African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-01-02 Mike Askew
This paper argues that there is a gap in the research on teaching and learning mathematics, and thus a need for research into effective teaching practices. From a selective review of literature, reasons are examined as to why less emphasis appears to have been placed on generating knowledge about teaching and effective mathematical teaching practices than on mathematics teachers and their knowledge
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Mismatch of the South African Foundation Phase Curriculum Demands and Learners’ Current Knowledge African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-01-02 Annemarie Fritz, Caroline Long, Moritz Herzog, Lars Balzer, Antje Ehlert, Elizabeth Henning
Against the background of the low mathematical performance of South African learners in international panel studies, there is an urgent need to improve mathematical education. In particular, the curriculum and its structure raise questions. It is logical that the prescribed curricula should align with learners’ developmental trajectories. Given the hierarchical structure of mathematics, the curricular
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Civil Engineering Students’ Perceptions of Conventional and Alternative Assessment Methods African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-01-02 Dillip Kumar Das
Debates continue about assessment methods and tasks in higher engineering education that would enable assessment of cognitive learning attributes and attainment of graduate attributes. This study explored the students’ perceptions of the conventional and alternative assessment methods that are relevant and could be used to assess cognitive learning and graduate attributes in undergraduate civil engineering
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Natural Sciences Teachers’ Beliefs as Barriers for Integrating ICTs in a Technology-rich Context African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2020-01-02 Avashkumar Juggernath, Nadaraj Govender
Ample research exists on barriers to the use of computers as a form of information and communication technologies (ICTs) in teaching. The most common barrier reported to prevent teachers from using computers in teaching is the lack of resources. However when resources are available, ICTs are still often not effectively integrated into teaching. This study explored how teacher beliefs relate to the