Abstract
In their enactment of the curriculum, teachers have a substantial role as instructional designers. Accordingly, any evaluation of the progression of students’ learning should first be concerned with the pedagogical intentions of the teacher. In this article we present a method for reconstructing teachers’ implicit and tacit considerations in their selection, sequencing and enactment of tasks. Two 11th grade teachers tagged all of the tasks that comprised a 5-week learning progression. Tagging consisted of assigning values to prescribed categories of metadata. Visual representations of the metadata revealed patterns in the tagged progressions, and allowed the teachers to reflect upon these patterns. Both teachers, though guided by very different didactical considerations, validated that many of their explicit and implicit intentions were revealed in the representations of the progressions. Furthermore, both teachers had the opportunity to reflect on tacit aspects of their instructional design that they were not previously aware of.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 100833 |
Journal | Journal of Mathematical Behavior |
Volume | 61 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Mar 2021 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:The work reported herein was supported by the Israel Ministry of Science and Technology , grant number 12946-3 . The authors wish to thank Dr. M. Adil Yalçın from Keshif LLC for his generous contribution to the development of the representation tools.
Funding Information:
The work reported herein was supported by the Israel Ministry of Science and Technology, grant number 12946-3. The authors wish to thank Dr. M. Adil Yal??n from Keshif LLC for his generous contribution to the development of the representation tools.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier Inc.
Keywords
- Didactic tagging
- Learning progression
- Learning trajectory
- Pedagogical design capacity
- Teacher reflection
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Mathematics (miscellaneous)
- Education
- Applied Mathematics