Abstract

There is an articulation gap for many students between the literacy practices developed at school and those demanded by higher education. While the school sector is often well attuned to the school-leaving assessments, it may not be as aware of the implicit quantitative literacy (QL) demands placed on students in higher education. The National Benchmark Test (NBT) in QL provides diagnostic information to inform teaching and learning. The performance of a large sample of school-leavers who wrote the NBT QL test was investigated (1) to demonstrate how school-leavers performed on this QL test, (2) to explore the relationship between performance on this test and on cognate school-leaving subjects and (3) to provide school teachers and curriculum advisors with a sense of the QL demands made on their students. Descriptive statistics were used to describe performance and linear regression to explore the relationships between performance in the NBT QL test and on the school subjects Mathematics and Mathematical Literacy. Only 13% of the NBT QL scores in the sample were classified as proficient and the majority of school-leavers would need support to cope with the QL demands of higher education. The results in neither Mathematics nor Mathematical Literacy were good predictors of performance on the NBT QL test. Examination of performance on selected individual items revealed that many students have difficulty with quantitative language and with interpreting data in tables. Given that QL is bound to context, it is important that teachers develop QL practices within their disciplinary contexts.

Highlights

  • Many students leaving the school system in South Africa, while prepared for leaving school, are to some extent unprepared for higher education

  • The results are presented for a large sample of school-leavers who wrote one version of the National Benchmark Tests Project (NBTP) quantitative literacy (QL) test and who qualified to progress to some kind of higher education

  • We present the overall distribution of scores on the entire QL test for the whole sample as well as for National Senior Certificate (NSC) Mathematics candidates and NSC Mathematical Literacy candidates separately

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Summary

Introduction

Many students leaving the school system in South Africa, while prepared for leaving school, are to some extent unprepared for higher education. 42) ‘the educational factor to which poor performance is perhaps most commonly ascribed across the higher education sector is student under-preparedness for standard undergraduate programmes’. The importance of quantitative literacy (QL) for higher education is widely recognised (see for example, Steen, 2004) and there is an increasing awareness that many academic disciplines make complex quantitative demands that are often very different from those that are the focus of traditional mathematics courses This ability to work with quantitative information in academic contexts is one of the academic literacies and presents particular difficulties for many students. Just over 40% performed at the ‘Basic’ level, which means that they would be severely challenged academically in higher education (Centre for Educational Testing for Access and Placement, 2015, p. 26)

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