Abstract

The study investigated the efficacy of the number manipulation strategy (NUMAS) as a model of experiential instruction and interest in arithmetic learning for pupils of lower basic levels. The population of the study consisted of 1205 lower basic III level pupils of the 2018/2019 session in Igbo-Etiti Local Government Area (L.G.A.) of Enugu State. A sample of 121 primary five pupils from 4 schools out of 53 primary schools in the study area was randomly sampled. The 121 pupils were composed of 42 males and 79 females used for the study. The study was guided by four research questions and four hypotheses. The hypotheses were tested at a p<.05 level of significance. The instruments used for the study were Arithmetic Test (ART) and Mathematics Interest Inventory Questionnaire (MIIQ) developed by the researcher. The ART and MIIQ instruments were faces validated by experts and their reliability indexes were 0.85 and 0.79 respectively, established using Cronbach alpha and split-half methods respectively. The data obtained with the instruments were analyzed using mean, standard deviations (SD), t-test and analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) statistics. Mean and SD was used in answering the research questions, while t-test and ANCOVA statistics were used in testing the hypotheses at P<.05 level of significance. The findings of the study showed that NUMAS is effective in teaching arithmetic, especially in enhancing the addition and subtraction skills acquisition of the pupils. Gender was found not to be a significant factor of variance in arithmetic achievement when the teaching of arithmetic is NUMAS based. The use of NUMAS was recommended to teachers, lower basic mathematics textbook authors and stakeholders in education, to ensure that NUMAS is adopted and adapted for use in Mathematics classroom instruction and learning.

Highlights

  • The National Policy on Education clearly stated that the objectives of primary education include, “providing opportunities for the child to develop life manipulative skills that will enable the child to function effectively in the society within the limits of the child’s capability,” (FRN, 2013, P. 18)

  • Unodiaku (2016) insisted that the right foundation of Mathematics instruction should be laid right from the infant classes and it is vital that the teaching of numbers should be on the right lines from the very start of formal education of learners because failure to acquire this fundamental background knowledge of Mathematics at the early stages would eventually lead to backwardness in Mathematics in later years (Unodiaku, 2016)

  • The result showed that students in the practical approach developed an interest that was significantly better than their counterparts in the conventional group

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Summary

Introduction

The National Policy on Education clearly stated that the objectives of primary education include, “providing opportunities for the child to develop life manipulative skills that will enable the child to function effectively in the society within the limits of the child’s capability,” (FRN, 2013, P. 18). Enhancing mathematics teaching and learning that can provide the child opportunities to develop his/her life-long manipulative skills becomes imperative. This is so because certain qualities that are nurtured by mathematics are the power of reasoning, creativity, abstract or spatial thinking, critical thinking, problem-solving ability and even effective communication skills (Guwahati News-Times, 2015). Unodiaku (2016) noted that a poor foundation for acquiring Mathematics knowledge in the infant classes is one of the major causes of poor performance of students in Mathematics at their later years of schooling. The trend of pupils’ poor performance in Mathematics is conspicuously evidenced in the years, 2010-2016, as reported in National Common Entrance Examination (NCEE), NECO examination which revealed dwindling and stagnating increase in percentage pass at credit level in Mathematics among the examinees as shown in Table 1 below: Year

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