Repository | Book | Chapter

204150

(2014) Probabilistic thinking, Dordrecht, Springer.

"It is very, very random because it doesn't happen very often"

examining learners' discourse on randomness

Simin Jolfaee, Rina Zazkis, Nathalie Sinclair

pp. 397-416

We provide an overview of how the notion of randomness is treated in mathematics and in mathematics education research. We then report on two studies that investigated students' perceptions of random situations. In the first study, we analyze responses of prospective secondary school teachers who were asked to provide examples of random situations. In the second study, we focus in depth on participants' perceptions of randomness in a clinical interview setting. Particular attention is given to the participants' ways of communicating the idea of randomness, as featured in the gestures that accompanied their discourse. We conclude that particular consideration of the notion of randomness—as intended in statistics and probability versus everyday uses of the term—deserves attention of instructors and instructional materials.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-007-7155-0_21

Full citation:

Jolfaee, S. , Zazkis, R. , Sinclair, N. (2014)., "It is very, very random because it doesn't happen very often": examining learners' discourse on randomness, in E. J. Chernoff & B. Sriraman (eds.), Probabilistic thinking, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 397-416.

This document is unfortunately not available for download at the moment.