Case study on mathematics pre-service teachers' difficulties in problem posing

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Abstract

This research is presented in a way that provides useful knowledge for successful problem posing by mathematics pre-service teachers. We present a review of the concept of mathematical creativity (by different authors) and review studies that underline the relevance of problem posing in teaching mathematics, studies that consider problem posing a way to identify students' learning patterns and to test them, and studies that relate mathematical competences to problem posing. Participants in the study were 10 pre-service teachers who were successful in problem solving. Data were gathered through qualitative techniques: classroom observations, sequences of tasks, questionnaires, student focus groups and discussion. The case study illustrated some of pre-service teachers' difficulties in problem posing: creating problems that students recognize as relevant to their everyday lives, problems adapted to the school curriculum at a specific educational level, and problems that can be self-corrected.

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Mallart, A., Font, V., & Diez, J. (2018). Case study on mathematics pre-service teachers’ difficulties in problem posing. Eurasia Journal of Mathematics, Science and Technology Education, 14(4), 1465–1481. https://doi.org/10.29333/ejmste/83682

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