Abstract

This paper examines the conceptions of ‘number sense’ as promoted in pre-service primary mathematics education courses at 11 South African Higher Education Institutions through the texts used by academics or prescribed for students. While all the participating institutions agree that the development of primary school learners’ ‘number sense’ is central to their mathematics methodology courses and that there is an overwhelming amount of research and literature on ‘number sense’ nationally and internationally, their conceptualisations of the nature of ‘number sense’ vary. Teacher educators, who develop pre-service teacher education courses, were asked to provide the texts, used to underpin the 11 universities’ mathematics education modules in the Bachelor of Education (Foundation and Intermediate Phases) and Post Graduate Certificate in Education (Foundation and Intermediate Phases) programmes. These texts were analysed drawing on Whitacre et al.’s emphasis on three ‘number sense constructs’ identified as Innate Number Sense, Early Number Sense and Mature Number Sense. The results show that there is no common language of description for ‘number sense’ across the 11 universities. This research implies that there is a need to develop a consistent understanding of ‘number sense’ and how it is developed across institutions.

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