2015
DOI: 10.1080/10691898.2015.11889724
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Identifying Statistical Concepts Associated with High and Low Levels of Self-Efficacy to Teach Statistics in Middle Grades

Abstract: all rights reserved. This text may be freely shared among individuals, but it may not be republished in any medium without express written consent from the authors and advance notification of the editor.

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Cited by 6 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 28 publications
(28 reference statements)
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“…Areas that PSMTs felt least confident to teach include selecting appropriate graphical representations, measures of association, two-way tables, and ideas of formal inference using simulation. PSMTs’ confidence to teach creating graphical representations and computing measures, and lack of confidence to teach interpreting measures of association, is consistent with previous research (Harrell-Williams et al, 2015). These findings provide a clear focus on areas that should be emphasized in courses that could strengthen PSMTs’ preparedness to teach statistics.…”
Section: Discussion and Recommendationssupporting
confidence: 84%
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“…Areas that PSMTs felt least confident to teach include selecting appropriate graphical representations, measures of association, two-way tables, and ideas of formal inference using simulation. PSMTs’ confidence to teach creating graphical representations and computing measures, and lack of confidence to teach interpreting measures of association, is consistent with previous research (Harrell-Williams et al, 2015). These findings provide a clear focus on areas that should be emphasized in courses that could strengthen PSMTs’ preparedness to teach statistics.…”
Section: Discussion and Recommendationssupporting
confidence: 84%
“…An earlier version of this instrument with 26 items aligned with Levels A and B of GAISE was validated to measure K-8 preservice teachers’ self-efficacy for teaching statistics (Harrell-Williams, Sorto, Pierce, Lesser, & Murphy, 2014b). The high school version contains the 26 items aligned to GAISE Levels A and B, and an additional 18 items validated and aligned to GAISE Level C (Harrell-Williams & Pierce, 2015; Harrell-Williams et al, 2014a). 2 In addition to an overall score, the instrument provides subscale scores that correspond to Levels A (11 items), B (15 items), and C (18 items).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, teachers may also feel that reasoning with context-rich data and uncertainty in statistical claims can make statistics difficult to learn and teach (e.g., Lovett & Lee, 2017;Leavy, Hannigan, & Fitzmaurice, 2013). One's confidence to teach statistics is then influenced by beliefs and perspectives about statistics, prior experiences in learning and teaching statistics, and understanding of statistical content (Lovett & Lee, 2017;Harrell-Williams, Sorto, Pierce, Lesser, & Murphy, 2015).…”
Section: Teaching Beliefs Perspectives and Practicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The incorporation of both content knowledge and personal teaching efficacy for algebra provides a more robust measure of teacher self‐efficacy for teachers who teach algebra. The ATSEI's design improves upon previous teacher self‐efficacy instruments that focused on general teacher self‐efficacy (Tschannen‐Moran & Hoy, ), general mathematics teacher self‐efficacy for elementary (Enochs, Smith, & Huinker, ), and those teacher self‐efficacy instruments that focused just on content such as statistics (Harrell‐Williams, Sorto, Pierce, Lesser, & Murphy, ). The use of student and teacher standards for initially selecting the content is a first in the field of TE research and two rounds of EFA contribute to the quality of the instrument.…”
Section: Future Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%