STATISTICS GRADUATE TEACHING ASSISTANTS’ BELIEFS, PRACTICES AND PREPARATION FOR TEACHING INTRODUCTORY STATISTICS

Authors

  • NICOLA JUSTICE University of Minnesota
  • ANDREW ZIEFFLER University of Minnesota
  • JOAN GARFIELD University of Minnesota

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52041/serj.v16i1.232

Keywords:

Statistics education research, graduate teaching assistant development, teacher practice, teacher beliefs

Abstract

Graduate teaching assistants (GTAs) are responsible for the instruction of many statistics courses offered at the university level, yet little is known about these students’ preparation for teaching, their beliefs about how introductory statistics should be taught, or the pedagogical practices of the courses they teach. An online survey to examine these characteristics was developed and administered as part of an NSF-funded project. The results, based on responses from 213 GTAs representing 38 Ph.D.–granting statistics departments in the United States, suggest that many GTAs have not experienced the types of professional development related to teaching supported in the literature. Evidence was also found to suggest that, in general, GTAs teach in ways that are not aligned with their own beliefs. Furthermore, their teaching practices are not aligned with professionally-endorsed recommendations for teaching and learning statistics.

First published May 2017 at Statistics Education Research Journal Archives

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Published

2022-06-15