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Eleven Grade 1 teachers’ understandings of mathematical language in a South African context
by
Livingston, Candice
, Coetzer, Tanja
, Barnard, Elna
in
African languages
/ Classrooms
/ Cognition & reasoning
/ Cognitive development
/ Communication disorders
/ Competence
/ Curricula
/ Educational Environment
/ Elementary education
/ Elementary school teachers
/ Elementary schools
/ English Grade 1 classrooms
/ English language
/ English proficiency
/ Equal Education
/ Fluency
/ Focus groups
/ Grade 1
/ Grade 1 teachers
/ Humanities, Multidisciplinary
/ Influence
/ Interviews
/ isiXhosa home language-speaking learners
/ Language
/ Language acquisition
/ Language Planning
/ Language Skills
/ Learning
/ Learning Strategies
/ Literature reviews
/ mathematical language learning
/ Mathematical problems
/ Mathematics
/ Mathematics education
/ Official Languages
/ Private schools
/ Public schools
/ Qualitative research
/ Register
/ Research design
/ Sampling
/ scaffolding strategies
/ Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
/ South African context
/ Teachers
/ Teaching
/ Teaching Methods
/ Terminology
/ understanding of mathematical language
/ Vocabulary
/ Xhosa language
2023
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Eleven Grade 1 teachers’ understandings of mathematical language in a South African context
by
Livingston, Candice
, Coetzer, Tanja
, Barnard, Elna
in
African languages
/ Classrooms
/ Cognition & reasoning
/ Cognitive development
/ Communication disorders
/ Competence
/ Curricula
/ Educational Environment
/ Elementary education
/ Elementary school teachers
/ Elementary schools
/ English Grade 1 classrooms
/ English language
/ English proficiency
/ Equal Education
/ Fluency
/ Focus groups
/ Grade 1
/ Grade 1 teachers
/ Humanities, Multidisciplinary
/ Influence
/ Interviews
/ isiXhosa home language-speaking learners
/ Language
/ Language acquisition
/ Language Planning
/ Language Skills
/ Learning
/ Learning Strategies
/ Literature reviews
/ mathematical language learning
/ Mathematical problems
/ Mathematics
/ Mathematics education
/ Official Languages
/ Private schools
/ Public schools
/ Qualitative research
/ Register
/ Research design
/ Sampling
/ scaffolding strategies
/ Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
/ South African context
/ Teachers
/ Teaching
/ Teaching Methods
/ Terminology
/ understanding of mathematical language
/ Vocabulary
/ Xhosa language
2023
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Do you wish to request the book?
Eleven Grade 1 teachers’ understandings of mathematical language in a South African context
by
Livingston, Candice
, Coetzer, Tanja
, Barnard, Elna
in
African languages
/ Classrooms
/ Cognition & reasoning
/ Cognitive development
/ Communication disorders
/ Competence
/ Curricula
/ Educational Environment
/ Elementary education
/ Elementary school teachers
/ Elementary schools
/ English Grade 1 classrooms
/ English language
/ English proficiency
/ Equal Education
/ Fluency
/ Focus groups
/ Grade 1
/ Grade 1 teachers
/ Humanities, Multidisciplinary
/ Influence
/ Interviews
/ isiXhosa home language-speaking learners
/ Language
/ Language acquisition
/ Language Planning
/ Language Skills
/ Learning
/ Learning Strategies
/ Literature reviews
/ mathematical language learning
/ Mathematical problems
/ Mathematics
/ Mathematics education
/ Official Languages
/ Private schools
/ Public schools
/ Qualitative research
/ Register
/ Research design
/ Sampling
/ scaffolding strategies
/ Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
/ South African context
/ Teachers
/ Teaching
/ Teaching Methods
/ Terminology
/ understanding of mathematical language
/ Vocabulary
/ Xhosa language
2023
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Eleven Grade 1 teachers’ understandings of mathematical language in a South African context
Journal Article
Eleven Grade 1 teachers’ understandings of mathematical language in a South African context
2023
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Overview
BackgroundFluency in mathematical language is essential for learning mathematics. Teachers must understand and use their diverse mathematical knowledge, including language and communication difficulties inherent to mathematics instruction. According to recent South African research, Grade 1 teachers are not equipped to utilise learners’ linguistic skills for efficient learning of mathematics.ObjectivesThis research investigates South African Grade 1 teachers’ mathematical language perceptions, experiences, and feelings. These Grade 1 teachers’ transcripts were analysed to discover their understanding of the language of mathematics.MethodExploratory, descriptive, and contextual research designs were used in conjunction with an adapted interactive qualitative analysis technique. Focus group interviews, individual interviews, and lesson observations, together with a purposive sampling technique, were used to gather the data from both public and private primary schools.ResultsThe results showed that Grade 1 teachers view mathematics as a separate language with its own vocabulary and register. The findings highlighted the need to simplify the language of mathematics to enhance understanding.ConclusionThis research concluded that language is essential to mathematics learning and that mathematics has its own register, which is acquired like any other additional language. To help isiXhosa learners understand mathematics in English, scaffolding strategies must be aligned with their linguistic demands.ContributionThis article provides important recommendations for teachers who need to recognise the reality that English is the lingua franca and ensure isiXhosa home language-speaking learners receive the necessary support to acquire actual proficiency in the academic register of English for mathematical language learning.
Publisher
AOSIS,AOSIS (Pty) Ltd,AOSIS Publishing on behalf of the Literacy Association of South Africa (LITASA)
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