A descriptive, holistic, multiple-case methodology was applied to examine the nature of participation in discourse of two low- and two high-achieving grade 6 students while solving mathematical tasks in a standards-based classroom. Data collected via classroom observations and student interviews were analyzed through a multiple-cycle coding process that yielded the within-case themes of use of space, meaning-making, and peer and teacher interactions. This student-focused inquiry addressed a methodological gap in the extant empirical literature by employing video-recording as a means of eliciting student awareness and reflection, which notably revealed differences in participation between the two low-achieving students. When considering implications, the results illuminate needed additional classroom norms, issues related to relative differences in students’ abilities in heterogeneous groups, benefits of using video-recording as a means of promoting student reflection, and the important role of the teacher in maintaining equitable participation.
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Journals Division
The University of Chicago Press
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Low- and High-Achieving Sixth-Grade Students’ Access to Participation during Mathematics Discourse
Brian Lack,
Forsyth County Schools
Susan Lee Swars and Barbara Meyers
Georgia State University
ARTICLE CITATION
Brian Lack, Susan Lee Swars, and Barbara Meyers, "Low- and High-Achieving Sixth-Grade Students’ Access to Participation during Mathematics Discourse," The Elementary School Journal 115, no. 1 (September 2014): 97-123.
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