美国与台湾学生数学认知之比较

Yea-Ling Tsao
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引用次数: 31

摘要

摘要本研究的主要目的在于探讨台湾儿童在数学认知上较美国儿童有所差异的原因。本研究以美国丹佛市和台湾台北市的小学为研究对象,分别选取21名和37名小学五年级学生作为研究对象。为了确定态度和信念是否对美国学生的数学成绩有如此深远的影响,研究认为将美国学生与中国学生进行比较可能会有所帮助。通过提供比较数据,研究人员发现美国和台湾学生在调查的四个方面的信念存在显著差异:如何学好数学,数学解决方案应该是什么,动机。本研究对我们理解两种文化中的儿童发展和教育有潜在的重要贡献。**********美国学生在数学和科学测试中的糟糕表现已经达到了国家危机的程度。为什么会这样?一项又一项的研究报告了美国人在国际竞争中地位低下的一个或另一个方面。例如,在最近的一项关于数学成就的跨国研究中,美国八年级和十二年级学生在解决问题、几何、代数、微积分和其他数学领域的成绩低于国际平均水平。相比之下,日本八年级学生在20个国家的儿童中平均得分最高,在十二年级水平,日本学生在香港仅次于中国学生(Garden, 1987)。我们必须问为什么会这样。为什么中国学生在跨国成绩研究中一直名列前茅,而美国学生却一直低于国际平均水平?这个研究项目的主要目的是试图为这个问题提供一些答案。研究者感兴趣的是探索幼儿在数学认知和态度上的跨文化差异。我们主要关心的是描述这两种文化中不同程度的成就发生的背景。研究人员不仅试图确定在解释我们在早期观察到的差异时似乎很重要的背景,而且还试图确定那些可能与在年龄较大的儿童和青少年中发现的成就的跨文化差异有关的背景。它对我们孩子的数学成绩有什么影响?研究者希望这些问题能在进一步的研究中得到解答。从逻辑上讲,儿童的学业成绩与三个主要因素有关:他们的智力、他们在学校的经历和他们在家里的经历。关于第一个因素,中国、日本和美国儿童在学术成就上的跨国差异似乎不太可能用一般智力的差异来解释。没有证据表明中国和日本的孩子比美国孩子更聪明。根据Schoenfeld(1989),人们从事数学活动的方式是由他们的数学概念所塑造的。有许多研究证实,情感因素会影响学生的行为。例如,感知个人控制(Lefcourt, 1982)和感知数学有用性(Fennema & Sherman, 1978)都与数学成绩呈正相关(Schoenfeld, 1989)。然而,情感因素与数学成绩之间是否存在因果关系尚不清楚。有趣的是,Schoenfeld(1989)发现数学表现和感知数学能力之间的相关性最强。在某些文化中,孩子的学业成绩被赋予了比其他文化更重要的角色。…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Comparison of American and Taiwanese Students: Their Math Perception
The major purpose of this study was to attempt to understand some of the reasons for Mathematics perception of Taiwanese children compared to American children. The study was conducted with elementary schools in the Denver metropolitan area and Taipei, Taiwan in which fifth graders in each city (21 and 37 respectively) were selected as target subjects in the study. To determine if attitudes and beliefs have this profound of effect on American students' performance in mathematics, research believes that it may be helpful to compare American students to Chinese students. By providing comparative data, the researcher found marked differences in the beliefs of American and Taiwanese students in four areas under investigation: how to do well in mathematics, what math solutions should be, motivation. The present study makes a potentially important contribution to our understanding of child development and education in two cultures. ********** Poor performance by American students on tests of mathematics and science has reached the level of a national crisis. Why is this? Study after study has reported on one or another facet of the low standing of Americans in international competition. For example, in a recent cross-national study of mathematics achievement, American students in the eighth and twelfth grades were below the international average in problem solving, geometry, algebra, calculus, and other areas of mathematics. In contrast, Japanese eighth graders received the highest average scores of children from 20 countries, and, at the twelfth-grade level, Japanese students were second only to Chinese students in Hong Kong (Garden, 1987). We must ask why this is the case. Why are Chinese students consistently among the top scorers in cross-national studies of achievement and American students consistently below the international average? The primary purpose of this research project was to attempt to provide some answers to this question. The researcher was interested in exploring cross-cultural differences in mathematics perception and attitude of younger children. Our major concern was to describe the context in which different levels of achievement occur in these two cultures. The researcher sought to identify not only contexts that appear to be important in explaining differences that we observed at the early years but also those that might be related to the cross-cultural differences in achievement that have been found among older children and youth. What effect does it have on our children's performance in mathematics? The researcher hope's these question s can be answered in further research. Literature Review Logically, children's academic achievement is related to three major factors: their intelligence, their experiences at school, and their experiences at home. With regard to the first factor, it seems unlikely that cross-national differences in academic achievement among Chinese, Japanese, and American children can be accounted for by differences in general intelligence. There is no evidence that Chinese and Japanese children are more intelligent than American children. According to Schoenfeld (1989), the way people engage in mathematical activities is shaped by their conceptions of mathematics. There have been many studies that confirm that affective factors shape how students behave. For instance, perceived personal control (Lefcourt, 1982), and perceived usefulness of mathematics (Fennema & Sherman, 1978) are all positively correlated with achievement in mathematics (Schoenfeld, 1989). However, it is unclear if there is a cause and effect relationship between affective factors and achievement in mathematics. It is interesting to note that Schoenfeld (1989) found that the strongest correlation was between mathematical performance and perceived mathematical ability. Children's academic achievement is given a more central role in some cultures than in others. …
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