Abstract

<p style="text-align:justify">Covid-19 has accelerated the speed of technocratic transformation in teaching and learning. Previous researches on whether technology enhances students’ motivation towards learning or burdens them with additional layer of anxiety in learning the nitty gritty of technology itself have mixed results. The purpose of this study was to explore early undergraduate students’ beliefs about learning mathematics with technology. These research participants were first-year female undergraduate students in a public university in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The study comprised of phase one with qualitative task-based interviews with four female first-year undergraduate students. Phase two included a quantitative belief survey with a sample of 62 students from the same institution. I constructed four major belief categories from the iterative process of interview data analysis– technology for computing and graphing, technology for speed and accuracy, technology for a short-cut but not for meaning, and affective aspects of beliefs. The quantitative survey result demonstrated that a majority of participants (about 75.8%) were found to be using some kinds of technological tools while learning mathematics. About 90% of them reported using a calculator while learning mathematics. A majority of participants (54.9%) believed that technology helps them in learning mathematics, and about 50% of them also believed that the use of technology improves their learning of mathematics.</p>

Highlights

  • Since belief is an abstract idea it may be defined in various ways

  • The quantitative survey result demonstrated that a majority of participants were found to be using some kinds of technological tools while learning mathematics

  • Students’ beliefs about the use of technology in learning mathematics have pedagogical implications for improving the interplay between mathematics learning, technological tools, and transformative teaching of mathematics. This interplay may enhance the application of technology to create a positive image toward the use of the tools for mathematics learning by transforming student beliefs about using technology for learning mathematics meaningfully

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Summary

Introduction

Since belief is an abstract idea it may be defined in various ways. Schoenfeld (1985) defines mathematics related belief as an individual’s personal worldview. For Lester, Garofalo and Kroll (1989), belief means an individual’s subjective knowledge of the belief object that may be a physical object or mathematical object or another thing. Hart (1989) considers belief as a personal judgment of something (see Belbase, 2019). A similar definition of belief has been proposed by Pajares (1992). This paper focuses on a group of undergraduate students’ belief about learning mathematics using technology

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