Teaching and learning mathematics with integrated small-group discussions. A learning study about scaling geometric figures
Abstract
The aim of this thesis is to contribute to a deeper understanding of the relationship between teaching and student learning in mathematics when small-group discussions are used in teaching. This thesis focuses on student learning of specific subject matter when small group discussions are used in whole-class teaching. The data analysed was generated in a learning study about enlarging and reducing two- dimensional geometric figures in Grade 8. The learning study involved four cycles, and five classes and three teachers participated. The data consist of 10 video- recorded lessons and 33 video-recorded small-group discussions. Variation theory was the theoretical framework used to analyse the data. Results show that the use of small-group discussions as a planned and integrated part of whole class teaching can contribute to widening the space of learning and increase students’ opportunities to learn what was intended during the lesson. In the study it was found that the small-group discussions solely did not provide sufficient opportunities for students to learn what was intended. Instead, lessons with pre- planned tasks for small-group discussion integrated in whole-class discussions, seems to provide more powerful learning opportunities in relation to what was intended to be compared to lessons with a less systematic use of small-group discussions. In the small-group discussions different ways of experiencing the object of learning were made possible to explore and in the subsequent whole- class discussions those different ways of experiencing were further explored. The results show that teachers benefit from listening to small-group discussions and when students report on such discussions. It was shown that teachers’ insights about the students’ ways of experiencing the object of learning were vital for
enacting whole-class teaching with small-group discussions in a powerful way. The teachers changed their teaching in response to what they noticed about what could be critical for student learning about the object of learning. The result of this study suggests that it is not a matter of whether small-group discussions should be used or not, but how small-group discussions can be used during whole class teaching to support student learning of an intended object of learning in mathematics for the whole class.
Parts of work
1. Svanteson Wester, J. & Kullberg, A. (2020). Understanding the relationship between length and area when changing the size of a two-dimensional geometric figure. Nordic Studies in Mathematics Education, 25(1), 89-100. 2. Svanteson Wester, J. (2021). Students' possibilities to learn from group discussions integrated in whole-class teaching in mathematics. Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 6(65), 1020-1036. https://doi.org/10.1080/00313831.2020.1788148 3. Svanteson Wester, J. (Submitted). Using small-group discussions in a learning study about geometric scaling.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Utbildningsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Education
Institution
Department of Pedagogical, Curricular and Professional Studies ; Institutionen för didaktik och pedagogisk profession
Disputation
Fredagen den 2 december 2022, kl.13.00, Sal BE 015, Läroverksgatan 15
Date of defence
2022-12-02
jenny.svanteson@gu.se
Date
2022-11-09Author
Svanteson Wester, Jenny
Keywords
variation theory
learning study
learning opportunities
small-group discussions
whole-class discussions
whole-class teaching
mathematics
scaling
illusion of linearity
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7963-111-6 print
978-91-7963-112-3 pdf
ISSN
0436-1121
Series/Report no.
Gothenburg Studies in Educational Sciences/ 471
Language
eng