Content area

Abstract

High school teachers often encounter incorrect solutions from students, especially when teaching combinatorics. This study investigates the ability of prospective mathematics teachers to assess the correctness of solutions to combinatorial problems and to falsify incorrect ones. 39 second-year prospective teachers participated in the experiment, analysing both correct and incorrect solutions to combinatorial tasks. They were asked not only to judge the correctness but also to identify the cause of procedural or conceptual errors. The results indicate that for incorrect solutions, 44.16% of the error identifications were accurate, and only 36.36% of cases could be successfully falsified. Furthermore, when evaluating correct solutions, 57.1% of the correct solutions were mistakenly judged as incorrect. Overall, 31 out of the 39 participants were unable to accurately determine the correctness of the solutions, despite their advanced mathematical background. These findings highlight the need to foster error-detection skills and thorough reasoning in teacher training programs.

Details

1007399
Location
Title
Towards Understanding the Error Analysis Thinking of Prospective Mathematics Teachers
Volume
20
Issue
4
Publication date
2025
Printer/Publisher
International Electronic Journal of Mathematics Education
https://www.iejme.com
Tel.: +44-208-936-7681
Publisher e-mail
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Peer reviewed
Yes
Summary language
English
Language of publication
English
Document type
Report, Article
Subfile
ERIC, Current Index to Journals in Education (CIJE)
Accession number
EJ1486431
ProQuest document ID
3279381320
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/towards-understanding-error-analysis-thinking/docview/3279381320/se-2?accountid=208611
Last updated
2025-12-05
Database
Education Research Index