2011
DOI: 10.1080/02188791.2011.621685
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The views of Pasifika students in New Zealand about communicating mathematically

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…However, there has been growing recognition of the inherently cultural nature of mathematics (Bishop, 1988;D'Ambrosio, 1985) and the impact of values in mathematics education on both cognitive and affective outcomes for students (Seah, 2018). In the case of New Zealand, the underachievement and disengagement from mathematics of specific groups such as Pa ¯sifika students can be attributed to a predominantly Eurocentric education system (Barton, 1995;Civil & Hunter, 2015;Hunter & Anthony, 2011;Sharma et al, 2011;Thaman, 2005). For example, in New Zealand mathematics classrooms, there is wide use of ability grouping, along with a focus on competition, Thaman (2005) Rimoni, 2019;Hunter et al, 2016;Phan, 2010;Thaman, 2005;Uehara et al, 2018) remaining quiet are perceived by teachers as passive and reluctant to participate (Hunter et al, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, there has been growing recognition of the inherently cultural nature of mathematics (Bishop, 1988;D'Ambrosio, 1985) and the impact of values in mathematics education on both cognitive and affective outcomes for students (Seah, 2018). In the case of New Zealand, the underachievement and disengagement from mathematics of specific groups such as Pa ¯sifika students can be attributed to a predominantly Eurocentric education system (Barton, 1995;Civil & Hunter, 2015;Hunter & Anthony, 2011;Sharma et al, 2011;Thaman, 2005). For example, in New Zealand mathematics classrooms, there is wide use of ability grouping, along with a focus on competition, Thaman (2005) Rimoni, 2019;Hunter et al, 2016;Phan, 2010;Thaman, 2005;Uehara et al, 2018) remaining quiet are perceived by teachers as passive and reluctant to participate (Hunter et al, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the researchers noted that the results may have been affected by the relatively large number of migrant students included in the sample.There have been few studies involving specific investigation of mathematics educational values of Pa ¯sifika students in New Zealand. Most studies (e.g.,Anthony, 2013;Hunter & Anthony, 2011;Sharma et al, 2011) undertaken within New Zealand with this group of students provide insight into valuing through examining student perceptions of what it means to be a "good" teacher or student perspectives of mathematical learning in the classroom. Overall, these studies appear to indicate that Pa ¯sifika students' values within schooling align with their collectivist cultural values from the home and community.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chinese students consistently espoused accomplishment (e.g., achievement, smartness, and memory), perseverance (e.g., effort and practice), and teacher-directed (e.g., teacher explanations, strictness, and teacher-led board work) values (Law et al, 2011;Lim, 2015;Zhang, 2019). New Zealand Māori and Pāsifika (people originating from the Pacific Islands) mathematics students valued family, having a respectful teacher, peer relationships, and collaborative mathematics pedagogy, highlighting the overlap between these students' cultural and mathematics educational values (Anthony, 2013;Hill, 2018;Hill et al, 2019;Sharma et al, 2011). In Australia, students valued a fun and relaxing environment, positive relationships with peers and teachers, a sense of accomplishment, relevance and meaning, and engagement (Seah & Peng, 2012).…”
Section: Values and Valuing In Mathematics Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%