Unravelling the Myth of Effective Teaching in Mathematics
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Mark Prendergast and John O'Donoghue, Unravelling the Myth of Effective Teaching in Mathematics, Irish Journal of Academic Practice, 3, 1, 2014
Abstract
Effective teaching is the backbone of any successful education system with many
arguing that it is the single biggest contributor to student success. However despite such
importance, significant differences in teacher effectiveness are still evident in Irish
classrooms at all levels of education. This research investigates the influence that
individual teachers can have on students’ enjoyment
of mathematics at second level and
attempts to unravel the myth of effective teaching.
The research started out as a follow-
on study that further analysed data collected by the authors when they designed a
pedagogical framework with the aim of promoting student interest in algebra through
effective teaching of the domain. This paper focuses entirely upon the quantitative
results of the evaluation of that study with regard
to whether there are differences in the
enjoyment scores of students’ in different classes
as a result of their individual teachers.
The paper also looks to unravel the myth of effective teaching through a series of focus
group interviews and a detailed literature review.
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Author's Homepage: http://people.tcd.ie/mprende
Type of material: Journal Article

