Communicating mathematics through images: A multimodal study of Year One students’ meaning-making when working with mathematics textbooks

This article focuses on how Swedish Year One students (age 7–8) make meaning when working with images in mathematics textbooks. Images include textbook images, but also students’ self-drawn images used as support for calculation. The focus was (1) what the images in the exercises were designed to o...

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Autor principal: Malin Norberg
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Publicado: LUMA Centre Finland 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/e3915b65b0b04ea6bfc72acababc1962
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:e3915b65b0b04ea6bfc72acababc19622021-12-03T13:09:39ZCommunicating mathematics through images: A multimodal study of Year One students’ meaning-making when working with mathematics textbooks10.31129/LUMAT.9.1.14802323-7112https://doaj.org/article/e3915b65b0b04ea6bfc72acababc19622021-12-01T00:00:00Zhttps://journals.helsinki.fi/lumat/article/view/1480https://doaj.org/toc/2323-7112 This article focuses on how Swedish Year One students (age 7–8) make meaning when working with images in mathematics textbooks. Images include textbook images, but also students’ self-drawn images used as support for calculation. The focus was (1) what the images in the exercises were designed to offer (the designed affordance), and (2) what the students discovered when working with them. The data material consisted of video transcripts of 18 students working with subtraction exercises from mathematics textbooks. The results showed that the students sometimes discovered the designed affordance and sometimes did not. The students who discovered the designed affordance sometimes used the image when performing the calculations, while others did not. Some students expressed that images in mathematics textbooks are for those who find mathematics difficult, and that completing exercises without using the images was desired. The students’ approaches to images were discussed in two specific cases: First, the students’ desire to use mathematical symbols rather than images may lead to students not discovering the mathematics content that the exercise is designed to offer. Second, the use of mathematical symbols rather than images may lead to students not discovering themselves as mathematical individuals. Malin NorbergLUMA Centre Finlandarticlemeaning-makingdesignaffordanceimagesmathematics textbooksEducation (General)L7-991Science (General)Q1-390ENFISVLUMAT, Vol 9, Iss 1 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
FI
SV
topic meaning-making
design
affordance
images
mathematics textbooks
Education (General)
L7-991
Science (General)
Q1-390
spellingShingle meaning-making
design
affordance
images
mathematics textbooks
Education (General)
L7-991
Science (General)
Q1-390
Malin Norberg
Communicating mathematics through images: A multimodal study of Year One students’ meaning-making when working with mathematics textbooks
description This article focuses on how Swedish Year One students (age 7–8) make meaning when working with images in mathematics textbooks. Images include textbook images, but also students’ self-drawn images used as support for calculation. The focus was (1) what the images in the exercises were designed to offer (the designed affordance), and (2) what the students discovered when working with them. The data material consisted of video transcripts of 18 students working with subtraction exercises from mathematics textbooks. The results showed that the students sometimes discovered the designed affordance and sometimes did not. The students who discovered the designed affordance sometimes used the image when performing the calculations, while others did not. Some students expressed that images in mathematics textbooks are for those who find mathematics difficult, and that completing exercises without using the images was desired. The students’ approaches to images were discussed in two specific cases: First, the students’ desire to use mathematical symbols rather than images may lead to students not discovering the mathematics content that the exercise is designed to offer. Second, the use of mathematical symbols rather than images may lead to students not discovering themselves as mathematical individuals.
format article
author Malin Norberg
author_facet Malin Norberg
author_sort Malin Norberg
title Communicating mathematics through images: A multimodal study of Year One students’ meaning-making when working with mathematics textbooks
title_short Communicating mathematics through images: A multimodal study of Year One students’ meaning-making when working with mathematics textbooks
title_full Communicating mathematics through images: A multimodal study of Year One students’ meaning-making when working with mathematics textbooks
title_fullStr Communicating mathematics through images: A multimodal study of Year One students’ meaning-making when working with mathematics textbooks
title_full_unstemmed Communicating mathematics through images: A multimodal study of Year One students’ meaning-making when working with mathematics textbooks
title_sort communicating mathematics through images: a multimodal study of year one students’ meaning-making when working with mathematics textbooks
publisher LUMA Centre Finland
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/e3915b65b0b04ea6bfc72acababc1962
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