Pretesting mathematical concepts with the mobile phone: Implications for curriculum design

Authors

  • Rita Ndagire Kizito University of South Africa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.19173/irrodl.v13i1.1065

Keywords:

pre-diagnostic testing, mobile phone, distance learning, undergraduate Calculus teaching, Realistic mathematics teaching, the perspective of didactic functionalities

Abstract

One of the neglected elements when teaching at a distance is establishing what learners already know at the beginning of the course or module. Unlike the face-to-face environment, in distance learning there is no opportunity for administering diagnostic activities just before the onset of instruction. This means that both the weak and more advanced students receive the same level of support since there is no mechanism for differentiating their learning needs. This paper describes the characteristics of a diagnostic test aimed at determining student understanding of the basic calculus concepts of the derivative and the integral, using the mobile phone as the method of delivery. As a proof-of-concept exercise, 10 questions designed to test concept attributes and procedural knowledge involving the two basic calculus concepts were given to a sample of 30 students at the beginning of the course. The implications for curriculum design were then analysed in terms of the didactical functionalities and the communication strategy that could be developed with reference to the mobile phone.

Author Biography

Rita Ndagire Kizito, University of South Africa

The greater part of my 25 year career has been within the education sector, starting from high school teaching, moving into teacher training and then into curriculum design and development coupled with experiential learning assessment. My main interest now is in supporting learning within multimedia learning environments which can work within African contexts.

Published

2012-01-31

How to Cite

Kizito, R. N. (2012). Pretesting mathematical concepts with the mobile phone: Implications for curriculum design. The International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning, 13(1), 38–55. https://doi.org/10.19173/irrodl.v13i1.1065

Issue

Section

Research Articles

Publication Facts

Metric
This article
Other articles
Peer reviewers 
2
2.4

Reviewer profiles  N/A

Author statements

Author statements
This article
Other articles
Data availability 
N/A
16%
External funding 
No
32%
Competing interests 
N/A
11%
Metric
This journal
Other journals
Articles accepted 
86%
33%
Days to publication 
202
145

Indexed in

Editor & editorial board
profiles
Academic society 
N/A
Publisher 
Athabasca University Press