Guidelines for effective technology facilitation of realistic mathematics education to enhance teaching practice
Loading...
Date
Authors
Supervisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
North-West University (South Africa)
Record Identifier
Abstract
Different teaching styles and approaches that are employed in a teaching environment have a huge
impact on the achievement of learners. The value of using the Realistic Mathematics Education
(RME) teaching approach to teaching Mathematics is evident in a number of studies. This study
aimed to determine how the RME approach, facilitated by technology, could be used to enhance
teaching practice. It also aimed to establish what support needs in-service Mathematics teacherstudents
in the South African context had with regard to using the RME approach, and it intended to
yield guidelines for the effective use of technology in implementing the RME approach, thereby
generating theoretically relevant knowledge to the body of scholarship. A purposeful stratified sample
was used to understand what needs in-service Mathematics teachers had in terms of making
Mathematics more realistic for their learners. Participants were selected from a group of in-service
teachers enrolled for the BEd Honours post-graduate degree in Mathematics education at the NWU.
Qualitative design-based research was an appropriate methodology for this study. I produced,
evaluated and adjusted content based on the RME approach, presented by means of a mobile
application to assist teacher-students in presenting learning content to their learners in a more realistic
and relevant way. The first stage of the study consisted of a systematic literature review (SLR) to
determine how the RME approach could be facilitated by technology to enhance teaching practice.
Individual interviews with participants followed, to determine their needs in terms of effectively
implementing the RME approach in their teaching practice. Thereafter iterative cycles of design and
intervention took place. A mobile application (app) was used to present content to the participants,
based on the needs identified in the individual interviews and the literature review. The re-design of
the intervention was guided by testing different versions of the prototype of the app with various users,
as well as by literature. Focus group interviews were used to establish the teacher-students’
perceptions and evaluation of the app. The final stage of the study produced guidelines based on the
findings of the study. Data were coded, sorted and summarised into themes using a computer
assisted qualitative data analysis software (CAQDAS), ATLAS.ti™. The data analysis and
interpretation were integrated with the literature review to answer the research questions. Based on
these findings, guidelines for the effective use of technology in implementing the RME approach in
teaching practice were designed. These guidelines were designed around the five dominant themes
in the study, namely Mathematics, RME, ICT, role-players and aspects relating to the app. The
guidelines will be of value to teachers, their learners, lecturers, curriculum specialists and instructional
designers in the design, implementation and adaptation of mathematical content and course material
Sustainable Development Goals
Description
PhD (Mathematics Education), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2017
