Secondary school students' levels of understanding in computing exponents
Date
2007Source
Journal of Mathematical BehaviorVolume
26Issue
4Pages
301-311Google Scholar check
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The aim of this study is to describe and analyze students' levels of understanding of exponents within the context of procedural and conceptual learning via the conceptual change and prototypes' theory. The study was conducted with 202 secondary school students with the use of a questionnaire and semi-structured interviews. The results suggest that three levels of understanding can be identified. At the first level students' interpretation of exponents is based upon exponents that symbolize natural numbers. At Level 2, students' knowledge acquisition process is a process of enrichment of the existing conceptual structures. Students at this level are able to compute exponents with negative numbers by extending the application of prototype examples. Finally, at Level 3 students not only extend the prototype examples but also reorganize their thinking in order to compute and compare exponents with roots, a concept which is quite different from the concept of exponents with natural numbers. © 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.