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      Mathematical meaning construction in language, tables, and images: The potential utility of language proficiency development in numeracy teaching

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          Abstract

          Numeracy entails a facility for communicating mathematical knowledge in diverse contexts. Indeed, large scale standardised assessments have demonstrated that numeracy is associated with both mathematics and language proficiency. And yet, while research in mathematics education in schools has demonstrated the utility of taking a discursive view of mathematics, similar developments in higher education studies are scarce. Moreover, as teaching interventions in numeracy may lead to tensions between mathematical and disciplinary knowledge, the prospect of including language proficiency development is challenging. Taking a discursive multimodal view, this study reports on a pilot teaching intervention that introduced explicit language proficiency development into numeracy teaching activities at a prominent South African university. The study found that the participants produced coherent descriptions of statistics when mathematical concepts were related to vocabulary and grammar. These observations suggest that language proficiency development has the potential to realise the goal of teaching mathematical knowledge within disciplinary curricula.

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          Most cited references54

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          A Cognitive Analysis of Problems of Comprehension in a Learning of Mathematics

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            The association between weekly hours of physical activity and mental health: A three-year follow-up study of 15–16-year-old students in the city of Oslo, Norway

            Background Mental health problems are a worldwide public health burden. The literature concerning the mental health benefits from physical activity among adults has grown. Adolescents are less studied, and especially longitudinal studies are lacking. This paper investigates the associations between weekly hours of physical activity at age 15–16 and mental health three years later. Methods Longitudinal self-reported health survey. The baseline study consisted of participants from the youth section of the Oslo Health Study, carried out in schools in 2000–2001 (n = 3811). The follow-up in 2003–2004 was conducted partly at school and partly through mail. A total of 2489 (1112 boys and 1377 girls) participated in the follow-up. Mental health was measured by the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire with an impact supplement. Physical activity was measured by a question on weekly hours of physical activity outside of school, defined as exertion 'to an extent that made you sweat and/or out of breath'. Adjustments were made for well-documented confounders and mental health at baseline. Results In boys, the number of hours spent on physical activity per week at age 15–16 was negatively associated with emotional symptoms [B (95%CI) = -0.09 (-0.15, -0.03)] and peer problems [B (95%CI) = -0.08 (-0.14, -0.03)] at age 18–19 after adjustments. In girls, there were no significant differences in SDQ subscales at age 18–19 according to weekly hours of physical activity at age 15–16 after adjustments. Boys and girls with five to seven hours of physical activity per week at age 15–16 had the lowest mean scores for total difficulties and the lowest percentage with high impact score at age 18–19, but the differences were not statistically significant after adjustments. Conclusion Weekly hours of physical activity at age 15–16 years was weakly associated with mental health at three-year follow-up in boys. Results encourage a search for further knowledge about physical activity as a possible protective factor in relation to mental health problems in adolescence.
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              Language as Social Semiotic: Thie Social Interpretation of Language and Meaning

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                cristal
                Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
                CRISTAL
                Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning (Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa )
                2310-7103
                2024
                : 12
                : 1
                : 63-84
                Affiliations
                [01] orgnameUniversity of Cape Town orgdiv1Centre for Higher Education Development
                Article
                S2310-71032024000200005 S2310-7103(24)01200100005
                10.14426/cristal.v12i1.2213
                d49015cc-0692-4648-a791-b39b6a73b193

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 30 November 2023
                : 23 July 2024
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 55, Pages: 22
                Product

                SciELO South Africa

                Categories
                Articles

                language proficiency development,numeracy,multimodal discourse analysis,systemic functional linguistics

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