scholarly journals The Survey of Relationship Between the Degree of Mathematics Anxiety in High School Students and the Personality Characteristics of their Mathematics Teachers

2013 ◽  
Vol 84 ◽  
pp. 1133-1137
Author(s):  
Hassan Heydari ◽  
Mansour Abdi ◽  
Mehdi Rostami
2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Tekin ◽  
B. Sayiner ◽  
C. Tiryaki ◽  
D. Sozen

2012 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Ruba Mohammad Miqdadi

The purpose ofthe study is to examine whether there are any significant differences in the mathematics anxiety levels between high school students in Jordan and their counterparts in the United States. Another purpose is to examine whether there are gender differences related to mathematics anxiety among high school students ofboth communities. A total of 1,386 high school students in the United States and Jordan participated in main study. This study showed that Jordanian high school students exhibited a significantly higher mathematics anxiety than United States high school students. Furthermore, the study revealed that female high schooLstudents in the United States acquired a significantly higher mathematics anxiety level than males. Another finding of this study was that males in Jordan had a significantly higher leveL of mathematics anxiety than males in the United States. The findings and educational implications ofthe study are discussed in light ofthe cultural difference between the two communities.


Author(s):  
Isaac Bengre Taley ◽  
Matilda Sarpong Adusei

Helping junior high school students to use calculators and computers for problem solving and investigating real-life situations is an objective of the junior high school mathematics curriculum in Ghana. Ironically, there is a technological drought in junior high school mathematics instruction in Ghana, with a suspicion that mathematics teachers’ competency in the use of calculators for teaching may be the source of this lack of use. This study sought to establish a correlation between junior high school mathematics teachers’ competence and the motivation supporting the use of calculators in teaching.  A descriptive survey comprising of a test and questionnaire was used to collect data from junior high school mathematics teachers in an educational district in Ghana. Teacher characteristics such as educational attainment, age, and gender in relation to teachers’ competency in the use of calculators were discussed in the study. The results showed that about 70% of the teachers exhibited a low level of calculator competence. Besides, novice teachers outperformed expert teachers in the calculator competency-based test. Additionally, mathematics teachers’ enthusiasm for using calculators in teaching was directly associated with the teachers’ level of competency. The findings may send a signal to stakeholders in their efforts to revising the Ghana JHS curriculum in order to actualize the curriculum desire for the integration of technology in the teaching and learning of JHS mathematics.


1998 ◽  
Vol 91 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-23
Author(s):  
Benjamin Ruff

Mathematics teachers are constantly challenged to find problems that bring to their students the intellectual pleasure of searching, discovering, generalizing, and finding new and unexpected relationships. An elementary geometric puzzle, familiar to many high school students and teachers, offers a means to roam into several seemingly unrelated areas. The following investigation suggests a way to do some mathematical research while maintaining a playful and informal approach.


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