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A study of the computations done by grade 9 learners in a Western Cape high school when simplifying algebraic expressions involving the negative symbol

The computations that learners do when simplifying algebraic expressions are multiple and diverse, with some determined by reasoning aligned with mathematics whilst others rely on idiosyncratic constructs like mnemonics or solution templates. Research in mathematics education highlights symbol sense...

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Main Author: Brink, Hestia
Other Authors: Jaffer, Shaheeda
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: School of Education 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Brink, Hestia
author2 Jaffer, Shaheeda
author_browse Brink, Hestia
Jaffer, Shaheeda
author_facet Jaffer, Shaheeda
Brink, Hestia
author_sort Brink, Hestia
collection Thesis
description The computations that learners do when simplifying algebraic expressions are multiple and diverse, with some determined by reasoning aligned with mathematics whilst others rely on idiosyncratic constructs like mnemonics or solution templates. Research in mathematics education highlights symbol sense and negative number concepts as persistent difficulties in learning algebra and categorises learners' errors, but it is wanting in explanations of learners' computations and how they might relate to the way learners think. This study identifies, describes and offers possible explanations for some of the computations that learners did when attempting to simplify algebraic expressions involving the negative symbol. Grade 9 learners from one class in a Western Cape high school were given a set of algebraic expressions to simplify after which interviews were conducted with some learners to discuss their solutions. In the computational analysis of the data, cognitive science and universal algebra were used as lenses for a deeper understanding of learners' mathematical (and non-mathematical) thinking. The data indicates learners' tendency to read algebraic expressions as strings of characters constituting different types of objects, classified in this study as operators, signs, numerals, letters, and superscripts. As suggested by the literature, the negative symbol presented learners with additional challenges, given its polysemic nature in mathematics. Many learners resorted to replacing standard mathematical operations with various operation-like manipulations taking different types of objects as arguments. Plausible reasons for learners' type-sensitivity and idiosyncratic computations offered by this study include: humans' innate capacity for recognising and categorising different objects and symbols; the biases produced from language; and the reliance on existing mental structures for the assimilation of new knowledge. In considering learners' computations at a fundamental level, this study contributes to a more complete view of what learners do computationally and, importantly, why.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42129 A study of the computations done by grade 9 learners in a Western Cape high school when simplifying algebraic expressions involving the negative symbol Brink, Hestia Jaffer, Shaheeda Davis, Zain Western Cape Schools Grade 9 Algebraic The computations that learners do when simplifying algebraic expressions are multiple and diverse, with some determined by reasoning aligned with mathematics whilst others rely on idiosyncratic constructs like mnemonics or solution templates. Research in mathematics education highlights symbol sense and negative number concepts as persistent difficulties in learning algebra and categorises learners' errors, but it is wanting in explanations of learners' computations and how they might relate to the way learners think. This study identifies, describes and offers possible explanations for some of the computations that learners did when attempting to simplify algebraic expressions involving the negative symbol. Grade 9 learners from one class in a Western Cape high school were given a set of algebraic expressions to simplify after which interviews were conducted with some learners to discuss their solutions. In the computational analysis of the data, cognitive science and universal algebra were used as lenses for a deeper understanding of learners' mathematical (and non-mathematical) thinking. The data indicates learners' tendency to read algebraic expressions as strings of characters constituting different types of objects, classified in this study as operators, signs, numerals, letters, and superscripts. As suggested by the literature, the negative symbol presented learners with additional challenges, given its polysemic nature in mathematics. Many learners resorted to replacing standard mathematical operations with various operation-like manipulations taking different types of objects as arguments. Plausible reasons for learners' type-sensitivity and idiosyncratic computations offered by this study include: humans' innate capacity for recognising and categorising different objects and symbols; the biases produced from language; and the reliance on existing mental structures for the assimilation of new knowledge. In considering learners' computations at a fundamental level, this study contributes to a more complete view of what learners do computationally and, importantly, why. 2025-11-06T11:46:09Z 2025-11-06T11:46:09Z 2025 2025-11-06T11:44:20Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MEd http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42129 en eng application/pdf School of Education Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Western Cape
Schools
Grade 9
Algebraic
Brink, Hestia
A study of the computations done by grade 9 learners in a Western Cape high school when simplifying algebraic expressions involving the negative symbol
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A study of the computations done by grade 9 learners in a Western Cape high school when simplifying algebraic expressions involving the negative symbol
title_full A study of the computations done by grade 9 learners in a Western Cape high school when simplifying algebraic expressions involving the negative symbol
title_fullStr A study of the computations done by grade 9 learners in a Western Cape high school when simplifying algebraic expressions involving the negative symbol
title_full_unstemmed A study of the computations done by grade 9 learners in a Western Cape high school when simplifying algebraic expressions involving the negative symbol
title_short A study of the computations done by grade 9 learners in a Western Cape high school when simplifying algebraic expressions involving the negative symbol
title_sort study of the computations done by grade 9 learners in a western cape high school when simplifying algebraic expressions involving the negative symbol
topic Western Cape
Schools
Grade 9
Algebraic
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42129
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