Affiliation:
1. Brooklyn College, City University of New York New York New York USA
2. Middle Tennessee State University Murfreesboro Tennessee USA
3. UNC Charlotte Charlotte North Carolina USA
Abstract
AbstractMiddle school students (n = 144) worked with an applet specially designed to introduce the concept of function without using algebraic representations. The purpose of the study was to examine whether the applet would help students understand function as a relationship between a set of inputs and a set of outputs and to begin to develop a definition of function based on that relationship. Results indicate that, by focusing on consistency of the outputs, the students, at a rate of approximately 80%, are able to distinguish functions from nonfunctions. Also, students showed some promise in recognizing constant functions as functions, a known area of common misconceptions. Students' main conceptual difficulty, likely caused by the context, was accepting nonintuitive outputs even if those outputs were consistent.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous),Engineering (miscellaneous),Education,Mathematics (miscellaneous)