Abstract

This article describes part of a study which investigated the role of questions in students approaches to learning mathematics at the secondary-tertiary interface, focussing on the enculturation of students at the University of Oxford. Use of the Mathematicasl Assessment Task Hierarchy taxonomy revealed A-level Mathematics and Further Mathematics questions in England and Wales to focus on requiring students to demonstrate a routine use of procedures, whereas those in first-year undergraduate mathematics primarily required students to be able to draw implicatins, conclusions and to justify their answers and make conjectures. While these findings confirm the need for reforms of examinations at this level, questions must also be raised over the nature of undergraduate mathematics assessment, since it is sometimes possible for students to ve awarded a firstclass examination mark solely through stating knoen facts or reproducing something verbatim from lecture notes.

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