Title: to 30 years of Research on the Equals Sign
1 to 30 years of Research on the Equals Sign
- Mary Margaret Capraro, Robert M. Capraro, Shirley
Matteson - Texas AM University
- Eric Knuth - University of Wisconsin
- Cheryl Lubinski Albert Otto - Illinois State
University - Research Presession National Council of Teachers
of Mathematics - Atlanta, GA March 21, 2007
2Symposium Focus
- (1) What changes have occurred in students
conceptual understanding of equality over the
past 30 years? - (2) What pedagogical and textbook issues remain
problematic concerning students conceptual
understanding of equality? - (3) What challenges remain to be addressed,
especially when extended to algebraic
equivalence, and - (4) What are the implications for teacher
preparation programs? - (5) Where do we go from here as mathematics
educators?
3Introduction
- Teachers and researchers have long recognized
that students tend to misunderstand the equal
sign as an operator sign, that is, a signal for
doing something rather than a relational symbol
of equivalence or quantity sameness - (Behr, Erlwanger, Nichols 1980 Sáenz-Ludlow
Walgamuth, 1998 Thompson Babcock, 1978
National Council of Teachers of Mathematics
(NCTM), 2000).
4Early studies
- Early studies investigated the placement of the
operator before or after the relational symbol,
and the position of the placeholder ? for the
answer. (Weaver, 1971, 1973) - 2nd and 3rd grade students were more proficient
with open-ended sentences in which the operation
is on the left (i.e., 5 8 ? 5 ? 13 ?
8 13) rather than the right (i.e., ? 5 8
13 ? c 8 13 5 ?).
5Historical Perspective
- Operational vs. relational
- Individualized understanding
- Cognitive development concerns
- International studies
- Older students
- The teachers role
- Methodological limitations
6Common misconceptions concerning the visual
appearance of number sentences
- Students preferred the operator on the left and
the equal sign on the right (most common textbook
format) (Weaver, 1971, 1973). - Students frequently rewrote problems such as 12
4 8 so that the answer appeared after the equal
sign (Baroody Ginsburg, 1983 Behr et al.,
1976, 1980). - Students rejected mathematics problems such as 8
8 because no operation was required (Baroody
Ginsburg, 1983) - Number sentences such as 4 3 5 2 were also
rejected (Carpenter Levi, 2000 Collis, 1974).
7How do U.S. teachers edition textbooks address
the issue of the equal sign?
- Methodology
- Textbook series (Grades 1-6)
- 1974-1976
- 1985
- 1991-1992
- 1998-1999
- Instrument
8Analysis
- Analysis
- Symbols
- - less than 1 page on average (.87)
- lt, gt - 8 pages on average (8.04)
- Problem Types
- traditional presentations (a b ? or a b
some other place holder) - graphical or countable problems (with objects or
a pan balance), and - complex problems (different operations on one
side of the equal sign as compared to the other,
i.e., variations on XY ? Z, complex
equalities, complex inequalities or other problem
types.)
9Discussion of Results
- Definitions of the equal sign
- Directions to the student
- Other relational symbols
- Teaching guidelines
- Bell (1999) provided the following
- Equals as can replace or means the same as
is an easy idea. But children who have been
through several years of schooling have more
difficulty than might be expected using the
symbol for that idea. Research studies show that
most older children reject 5 5 (they may say
there is no problem), 4 2 2 (they may say
that the answer is on the wrong side), 4 3 5
2 (they may say that there are two problems but
no answers). (Grade 1, p. 202)
10How do mathematics methods books in the U.S.
present the equal sign?
- Six methods books examined
- Cathcart, Pothier, Vance, Bezuk, (2006)
- Hatfield, Edwards, Bitter, Morrow, (2005)
- Reys, Linquist, Lamdbin, Smith, Suydam, (2004)
- Smith, (2001)
- Tucker, Singleston, Weaver, (2006)
- Van De Walle, (2004)
11Results
- Strategies ranged from
- nothing at all (Smith, 2001)
- a single paragraph (Cathcart, Pothier, Vance,
Bezuk, 2006 Reys, Linquist, Lamdbin, Smith,
Suydam, 2004 Van De Walle, 2004) - to an activity (Tucker, Singleton, Weaver,
2006) - Seemingly it may be assumed by the authors of
these textbooks that preservice teachers
understand the issues related to the equal sign
and the implications for their students.
12Cathcart et al. (2006)
- One paragraph suggests using the equal sign
interchangeably with words like makes
(addition) and leaves (subtraction) - approach allows students to obtain correct
answer to simple - problems leads to
misconceptions such as 2 6 ? 5 - verbiage also can lead students to
misconceptions of the equal sign as an operator.
13Hatfield et al. (2005)
- Develops meaning of the four operation signs
(add, subtract, multiply, and divide) but does
not mention the equal sign - section on multiplication describe use of the
sign in one sentence and then substitute
are for the sign in the sentence
immediately following implying a literal
translation of are for
14Reys et al. (2004) and Van De Walle (2004)
- Both alert preservice teachers to the common
misconception that the equal sign means, the
answer is coming - Both inform readers that using the calculator
reinforces the equal sign misconception since the
answer comes after the equal sign is pressed.
15Tucker et al. (2006)
- This Equals That is presented as an activity to
introduce the equal sign. Through the activity,
the authors suggest saying to students that, we
use the equal sign to tell how many blocks there
are all together (p. 98). Even though these
authors do present an introduction to the equal
sign, their explanation suggests that the answer
follows the equal sign.
16Counteractions to this Misconception
- A balance scale can help students develop the
correct conceptual understanding of equality and
the equal sign (Reys et al, 2004) - Teachers should use the phrase is the same as
(p. 139) instead of equals as students read
number sentences (Van De Walle, 2004).
17Comparisons Between Chinese and U.S. 6th Grade
Students Concerning the Concept of Equality
- Cross-cultural comparisons lead to more explicit
understanding of ones own implicit theories
about how children learn mathematics (Stigler
Perry, 1988).
18Research Questions
- A) Is the equal sign misconception present in
China where instruction regarding the equal sign
is presented as equivalence? - B) Is the misconception regarding the
interpretation of the equal sign limited to the
problem type 8 4 ? 7?
19Do elementary children still interpret the
sign as an operator?
- Participants
- Randomly selected representative samples
- U.S. sixth graders (N105)
- Chinese sixth graders (N145)
20Instruments
- 4 items
- 6 9 ? 4
- ? 8 12 5
- ? 3 5 7 ?
- 6 8 3 11 T or F
- Pilot study
- Interview for selecting two groups of students
- Significant difference in the scores
21Analysis
- For determining if item format was a source of
confusion - used pair-wise correlations and a repeated
measures design - For comparing U.S. and Chinese students
performance - used a multivariate analysis
22Results - Is the misconception limited to the
problem type 8 4 ? 5?
- Pairwise correlations among 4 items (except the
2nd box in ? 3 5 7 ??) - (R12 0.811, R13 0.688, R23 0.706, R14
0.523, R24 0.528, R34 0.485) -
- It shows the fourth item is somewhat different.
23Results - Is the misconception limited to the
problem type 8 4 ? 5?
- Repeated measure (Bonferroni, alpha .025)
- For first 3 questions F (2, 208) 1.799, p
0.168 - For all 4 questions F (3, 312) 16.063, p lt
0.001 - Therefore, U. S sixth graders misconception
about the equal sign is not limited to the form 8
4 ? ? 5, the first three problems in our
test reflected the same evidence of
misunderstanding.
24Results - Is the equal sign misconception present
in China?
- Question 1 Question 2 Question 3
Question 4 - 6 9 ? ? 4 ? 8 12 5? ?
3 5 7 ?? 6 8 3 11 T or F - 1st Box
2nd Box -
- U.S. Grade 6 28.6 28.6 23.8 86.7 47.6 105
- Chinese Grade 6 98.6 96.6 98.6 97.9 91.7 145
25Results - Is the equal sign misconception present
in China?
- MANOVA was used to examine the effect of the
outcomes of the four items (except the 2nd box in
the 3rd item) - Significant difference
- Q1 (F 138.628 p lt 0.001 R2 0.471)
- Q2 (F 140.278 p lt 0.001 R2 0.473)
- Q3 (F 121.592 p lt 0.001 R2 0.438)
- Q4 (F 33.165 p lt 0.001 R2 0.175)
26Results - Is the equal sign misconception present
in China?
- A pairwise comparison test
- Chinese sixth graders outperformed U. S. sixth
graders on all four questions (all p-values lt
0.001)
27Discussion
- Our findings are consistent with that of other
researchers (28.6 vs. 31, 32). (Rittle-Johnson
Alibali,1999 Knuth, Stephens, McNeil,
Alibali, 2006). - Our U.S. sixth grade sample and previous U.S.
samples lag far behind Chinese sixth grade
samples, which may be indicative of pedagogical
issues and an answer for the disparate results.
28- This presentation is available at
- http//coe.tamu.edu/rcapraro/200720presentations
/