Sunday, 17 February 2019

Short Paper Proposal

Rote Learning in the math class

For teachers and parents and the rest of the world, it is such a joy to see our children recall facts from memory with little or no mistakes. For example, imagine a four-year-old being able to recite 4x table or 7x table. Who would not be awed at such ‘intelligence’ at that age? Repetition is fun especially when it involves very weird gestures or actions which depends on the teacher to make it interesting and playful. Eventually, children can understand the concept at that moment and may easily recall overtime, but how well can they relate what they have memorized to real life experiences or logic?

The traditionalists often support rote learning which is a memorization technique based on repetition to help students get to understand a concept. Most students tend to grasp the concept but are unable to generalize, cannot tell when an answer is wrong or cannot see alternate ways to get work done. 
  However, contemporary research has shown that there are other several ways to help children retain what they have learned forever other than memorization.

For my paper, I would like to discuss the implications of rote learning and how effectively teachers can use it to benefit their students in the math class. My discussion will center around these three articles:

Main Article

SKEMP, R. R. (2006). Relational understanding and instrumental understanding. Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 12(2), 88-95.
Two other articles

Mayer, R. E. (2002). Rote versus meaningful learning. Theory into Practice, 41(4), 226-232. doi:10.1207/s15430421tip4104_4

Akin, E. (2014). In defense of "mindless rote". Nonpartisan Education Review, 10(2), 1-13.


1 comment:

  1. Milli, your second and third articles are not connected by by being in the reference list of the first article. That is not ok. Let's chat and sort this out!

    ReplyDelete