Abstract

Background: During their university studies, student teachers are equipped for the teaching profession in various domains of knowledge and practice. In addition to learning pedagogic skills for practice purposes, they also expand their knowledge of the subjects that they will teach. In mathematics teacher education, one important principle is that the content of the subject must, somehow, be fused with the pedagogy in what has become known as mathematical knowledge for teaching (MKT). Although several studies have been conducted about students’ performance of MKT, there is little research in South Africa about how students routinely experience the coursework itself. In this study, I argue that mathematics knowledge and skills should ideally precede the teaching of pedagogy, for reasons of communicating the concepts clearly and for building a foundation of mathematical thinking prior to practising teaching skills.Aim: To find out what the student teachers’ self-reported experience of one component of a mathematics content course are, namely their engagement with problem-solving tasks.Methods: A qualitative case study of student teachers’ learning, with the primary source of data, the student teachers’ reflective journal entries. Data were analysed through coding, categorising and thematised mindful of the MPSKT framework.Results: The findings indicated that, whilst the students’ understanding of the processes of problem-solving was deepened during the course, matters of pedagogy arose spontaneously.

Highlights

  • Mathematics content courses have increasingly come under the spotlight in initial teacher education (ITE) (O’Connor &Thomas 2019; Qian & Youngs 2016; Superfine, Li & Martinez 2013), because of the importance of adequate mathematics content knowledge. (National Mathematics Advisory Panel 2008; Wu 2017)

  • From a South African ITE perspective, adequate mathematics content knowledge is vital to break the cycle of mediocre primary school mathematics teaching and learning (Taylor 2019, 2021)

  • Whilst there are many examples of the successful adaptation of ITE mathematics courses to address the teaching of mathematical problem-solving skills in different parts of the world, there is a dearth of research about how student teachers experience such teaching

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Summary

Background

Student teachers are equipped for the teaching profession in various domains of knowledge and practice. In addition to learning pedagogic skills for practice purposes, they expand their knowledge of the subjects that they will teach. One important principle is that the content of the subject must, somehow, be fused with the pedagogy in what has become known as mathematical knowledge for teaching (MKT). I argue that mathematics knowledge and skills should ideally precede the teaching of pedagogy, for reasons of communicating the concepts clearly and for building a foundation of mathematical thinking prior to practising teaching skills. Aim: To find out what the student teachers’ self-reported experience of one component of a mathematics content course are, namely their engagement with problem-solving tasks

Results
Introduction
Findings
Discussion and conclusion
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