Journal on Mathematics Education (Dec 2019)

ELEMENTARY PRESERVICE TEACHERS’ KNOWLEDGE, PERCEPTIONS AND ATTITUDES TOWARDS FRACTIONS: A MIXED-ANALYSIS

  • Roslinda Rosli,
  • Dianne Goldsby,
  • Mary Margaret Capraro,
  • Anthony J Onwuegbuzie,
  • Robert M Capraro,
  • Elsa Gonzalez Y Gonzalez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.22342/jme.11.1.9482.59-76
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 59 – 76

Abstract

Read online

Previous research has shown knowledge, perceptions, and attitudes are essential factors during mathematics classroom instruction. The current study examined the effects of a 3-week fraction instructional unit using concrete models, problem-solving, and problem-posing to improve elementary preservice teachers’ knowledge, perceptions and attitudes towards fractions. A quasi-experiment design was implemented to gather data via closed-ended, open-ended, and essay tasks from a convenience sampling of 71 female elementary preservice teachers during pre- and post-assessments. The study discovered that the select preservice teachers were weak in the content knowledge specifically on unit-whole, part-whole, equivalent area, arithmetic operations, and ordering fractional values. In contrast, the incorporation of concrete models, problem-solving and problem-posing was effective in improving the preservice teachers’ level of pedagogical content knowledge, perceptions and attitudes towards fractions. Implications of the results and suggestions are discussed.

Keywords