Length measurement and estimation in primary school

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksPublished abstract in conference proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Standard

Length measurement and estimation in primary school. / Ruwisch, Silke; Huang, Hsin Mei E.

Proceedings of the 43rd Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education: Pretoria, South Africa 7 – 12 July 2019; Volume 4 . ed. / Mellony Graven; Hamsa Venkat; Anthony A Essien; Pamela Vale. Vol. 4 Pretoria : International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2019. p. 180 (Proceedings of the ... International Conference for the Psychology of Mathematical Education; Vol. 43, No. 4).

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksPublished abstract in conference proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ruwisch, S & Huang, HME 2019, Length measurement and estimation in primary school. in M Graven, H Venkat, AA Essien & P Vale (eds), Proceedings of the 43rd Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education: Pretoria, South Africa 7 – 12 July 2019; Volume 4 . vol. 4, Proceedings of the ... International Conference for the Psychology of Mathematical Education, no. 4, vol. 43, International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, Pretoria, pp. 180, 43rd Annual Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, Pretoria, South Africa, 07.07.19. <https://www.up.ac.za/media/shared/705/pme43/Proceedings/PME43Volume-4-proceedings-oc_pp.pdf>

APA

Ruwisch, S., & Huang, H. M. E. (2019). Length measurement and estimation in primary school. In M. Graven, H. Venkat, A. A. Essien, & P. Vale (Eds.), Proceedings of the 43rd Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education: Pretoria, South Africa 7 – 12 July 2019; Volume 4 (Vol. 4, pp. 180). (Proceedings of the ... International Conference for the Psychology of Mathematical Education; Vol. 43, No. 4). International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education. https://www.up.ac.za/media/shared/705/pme43/Proceedings/PME43Volume-4-proceedings-oc_pp.pdf

Vancouver

Ruwisch S, Huang HME. Length measurement and estimation in primary school. In Graven M, Venkat H, Essien AA, Vale P, editors, Proceedings of the 43rd Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education: Pretoria, South Africa 7 – 12 July 2019; Volume 4 . Vol. 4. Pretoria: International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education. 2019. p. 180. (Proceedings of the ... International Conference for the Psychology of Mathematical Education; 4).

Bibtex

@inbook{b4756c4cef8d491aaa88a931983f0464,
title = "Length measurement and estimation in primary school",
abstract = "Due to the importance of length measurement learning (e.g. Barrett, Clements, & Sarama, 2017), we want to deepen the understanding of similarities and differences on it in different countries. Starting with the comparative analysis of Lee & Smith III (2011) between the US and Singapore, we analyzed the similarities and differences in Taiwanese and German elementary written textbooks concerning the treatment of length understanding, measurement, and estimation.The length measurement units of four German elementary textbook series and three from Taiwan form the corpus of analysis. In applying the coding scheme of Lee and Smith III (2011) to our data, we added BL (benchmark learning) and CS (curvy vs. straight line) as conceptual categories, and RJ (reasoning and justification) as a category linking between conception, procedure, metacognition, and language.Nearly the same time for teaching length is intended in both countries. As in other countries, procedural affordances dominate the conceptual learning situations in both countries, a tendency which was stronger for the German than the Taiwanese textbook series.Although units can be converted, reasoning and justification and benchmark learning were the most common conceptual elements in both countries, their importance differed. The Taiwanese textbooks mainly stressed the idea of conversion, whereas the German textbooks focused more on benchmark learning. The comparison of procedural elements showed that both countries very often focused on unit conversion, measuring with a ruler, and addition and subtraction of length. In the Taiwanese textbooks more tasks asked for direct comparison and measurement with nonstandard units, whereas the German textbooks stressed visual estimation.",
keywords = "Mathematics",
author = "Silke Ruwisch and Huang, {Hsin Mei E.}",
year = "2019",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-0-6398215-6-6",
volume = "4",
series = "Proceedings of the ... International Conference for the Psychology of Mathematical Education",
publisher = "International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education",
number = "4",
pages = "180",
editor = "Mellony Graven and Hamsa Venkat and Essien, {Anthony A} and Pamela Vale",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 43rd Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education",
note = "43rd Annual Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, PME 2019 ; Conference date: 07-07-2019 Through 12-07-2019",
url = "https://www.igpme.org/publications/current-proceedings/",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Length measurement and estimation in primary school

AU - Ruwisch, Silke

AU - Huang, Hsin Mei E.

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Due to the importance of length measurement learning (e.g. Barrett, Clements, & Sarama, 2017), we want to deepen the understanding of similarities and differences on it in different countries. Starting with the comparative analysis of Lee & Smith III (2011) between the US and Singapore, we analyzed the similarities and differences in Taiwanese and German elementary written textbooks concerning the treatment of length understanding, measurement, and estimation.The length measurement units of four German elementary textbook series and three from Taiwan form the corpus of analysis. In applying the coding scheme of Lee and Smith III (2011) to our data, we added BL (benchmark learning) and CS (curvy vs. straight line) as conceptual categories, and RJ (reasoning and justification) as a category linking between conception, procedure, metacognition, and language.Nearly the same time for teaching length is intended in both countries. As in other countries, procedural affordances dominate the conceptual learning situations in both countries, a tendency which was stronger for the German than the Taiwanese textbook series.Although units can be converted, reasoning and justification and benchmark learning were the most common conceptual elements in both countries, their importance differed. The Taiwanese textbooks mainly stressed the idea of conversion, whereas the German textbooks focused more on benchmark learning. The comparison of procedural elements showed that both countries very often focused on unit conversion, measuring with a ruler, and addition and subtraction of length. In the Taiwanese textbooks more tasks asked for direct comparison and measurement with nonstandard units, whereas the German textbooks stressed visual estimation.

AB - Due to the importance of length measurement learning (e.g. Barrett, Clements, & Sarama, 2017), we want to deepen the understanding of similarities and differences on it in different countries. Starting with the comparative analysis of Lee & Smith III (2011) between the US and Singapore, we analyzed the similarities and differences in Taiwanese and German elementary written textbooks concerning the treatment of length understanding, measurement, and estimation.The length measurement units of four German elementary textbook series and three from Taiwan form the corpus of analysis. In applying the coding scheme of Lee and Smith III (2011) to our data, we added BL (benchmark learning) and CS (curvy vs. straight line) as conceptual categories, and RJ (reasoning and justification) as a category linking between conception, procedure, metacognition, and language.Nearly the same time for teaching length is intended in both countries. As in other countries, procedural affordances dominate the conceptual learning situations in both countries, a tendency which was stronger for the German than the Taiwanese textbook series.Although units can be converted, reasoning and justification and benchmark learning were the most common conceptual elements in both countries, their importance differed. The Taiwanese textbooks mainly stressed the idea of conversion, whereas the German textbooks focused more on benchmark learning. The comparison of procedural elements showed that both countries very often focused on unit conversion, measuring with a ruler, and addition and subtraction of length. In the Taiwanese textbooks more tasks asked for direct comparison and measurement with nonstandard units, whereas the German textbooks stressed visual estimation.

KW - Mathematics

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85180773405&partnerID=8YFLogxK

M3 - Published abstract in conference proceedings

AN - SCOPUS:85180773405

SN - 978-0-6398215-6-6

VL - 4

T3 - Proceedings of the ... International Conference for the Psychology of Mathematical Education

SP - 180

BT - Proceedings of the 43rd Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education

A2 - Graven, Mellony

A2 - Venkat, Hamsa

A2 - Essien, Anthony A

A2 - Vale, Pamela

PB - International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education

CY - Pretoria

T2 - 43rd Annual Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education

Y2 - 7 July 2019 through 12 July 2019

ER -