Abstract
In this study, 176 Turkish seventh-grade students were asked to pose three problems for each of the swimming and purchasing tasks to examine how the solvability and complexity of the problems changed depending on the order of responses. The purchasing task required to pose a problem to derive a specific answer before posing new problems, whereas the swimming task required to pose problems based on existing data. The findings indicated that students performed poorly in terms of posing solvable problems in both tasks. The majority of solvable responses in the purchasing task were at the high complexity level, but most in the swimming task were at the low complexity level. No evidence of a relationship between the order of the responses and any of the analysis units (solvability and complexity) was found. Furthermore, when comparing the groups that posed and did not pose solvable problems for the specific answer in the purchasing task, the former group had a stronger tendency to maintain the complexity points in their other responses compared to their first response.
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