The impact of disadvantage on the learning of mathematics: a study of pupils’ experiences in low attaining groupsTools Nwabuikwu, Stephanie Ngozi (2018) The impact of disadvantage on the learning of mathematics: a study of pupils’ experiences in low attaining groups. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
AbstractGood outcomes in school mathematics open up course and career options and later advancement in a society where knowledge of mathematics provides access to opportunities and income. Nevertheless, certain groups are marginalised by mathematics education and thus fail to achieve their potential. This marginalisation might be in terms of gender or ethnicity, about which much has been written, or could be in relation to the social class backgrounds of young people. At the macro level, one form of discrimination in school mathematics relates to how notions of attainment define how learners are grouped, which in turn strongly influences what and how they get taught. Whilst there is much research evidence that indicates the advantages and disadvantages of attainment grouping on achievement and pupils’ self-concept there is insufficient attention given to the micro-processes through which these attainment groups operate to reinforce those initial divisions into classes.
Actions (Archive Staff Only)
|