Rieu Andreas, Loibl Katharina, Leuders Timo
Institute for Mathematics Education, University of Education Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
Institute of Psychology, University of Education Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
Front Psychol. 2024 Sep 25;15:1405756. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1405756. eCollection 2024.
To adapt teaching to the prerequisites of students, teachers have various options at their disposal to gather and process information as the basis to form a judgment, such as carrying out tests, talking to and observing the behavior of students, or administering tasks. The complexity of such a judgment arises from the multitude of observations and their different possible explanations. This complexity might be reduced when teachers focus on one hypothesis instead of considering multiple hypotheses, interpret information in a confirmatory way, and not collect diagnostically relevant information. However, in this way, they run the risk of undesirable biased judgments. It therefore seems important to improve diagnostic judgments by selecting and processing information in a more reflective way. Research indicates that if information on a student is not easily available but restricted (e.g., by time pressure, difficult access to the student or high effort), a teacher who wants to make a careful decision is forced to rely on more reflective processes in the selection of tasks and in the interpretation of solutions. The present experimental study therefore investigates how the restricted availability of information in a specific diagnostic situation-when diagnostically inexperienced prospective mathematics teachers determine misconceptions in decimal fractions-influences the underlying cognitive processes. We assume that restricting the availability of information on student behavior augments the attentional focus and therefore reduces cognitive biases. Such more reflective processing can be observed by an increased time spent per piece of information, which should lead to the processing of relevant information and further increase judgment accuracy. To investigate these hypotheses, prospective teachers without prior knowledge in diagnosing misconceptions ( = 81) were asked to diagnose misconceptions on decimal fractions of virtual students by collecting information on students' solutions. Data concerning the effects of restricting the availability of information on teachers' cognitive processes were analyzed. The results show that with restricted information, participants indeed select a greater proportion of diagnostically relevant tasks, which positively influences judgment accuracy. These results are discussed with respect to their significance for framing teacher training and for further research.
为了使教学适应学生的先决条件,教师有多种方法来收集和处理信息,作为形成判断的基础,例如进行测试、与学生交谈并观察其行为,或布置任务。这种判断的复杂性源于大量的观察结果及其不同的可能解释。当教师专注于一个假设而不是考虑多个假设、以证实性的方式解释信息且不收集诊断相关信息时,这种复杂性可能会降低。然而,这样做他们有做出不良偏差判断的风险。因此,以更具反思性的方式选择和处理信息来改进诊断判断似乎很重要。研究表明,如果关于学生的信息不容易获取且受到限制(例如,由于时间压力、难以接触到学生或付出的努力很大),想要做出谨慎决定的教师在选择任务和解释解决方案时就不得不依赖更具反思性的过程。因此,本实验研究调查了在特定诊断情境下信息获取受限的情况——即缺乏诊断经验的未来数学教师确定小数分数中的误解时——如何影响潜在的认知过程。我们假设限制学生行为信息的获取会增强注意力焦点,从而减少认知偏差。通过每条信息花费的时间增加可以观察到这种更具反思性的处理方式,这应该会导致对相关信息的处理并进一步提高判断准确性。为了研究这些假设,我们要求81名没有诊断误解先验知识的未来教师通过收集虚拟学生解决方案的信息来诊断小数分数方面的误解。分析了关于限制信息获取对教师认知过程影响的数据。结果表明,在信息受限的情况下,参与者确实选择了更大比例的诊断相关任务,这对判断准确性产生了积极影响。我们将讨论这些结果对于构建教师培训和进一步研究的意义。