PROBABILITY FROM A SOCIO-CULTURAL PERSPECTIVE

Authors

  • SASHI SHARMA The University of Waikato

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52041/serj.v15i2.244

Keywords:

Statistics education research, Teaching probability, Socio-cultural theory, High-school students, Language issues

Abstract

There exists considerable and rich literature on students’ misconceptions about probability; less attention has been paid to the development of students’ probabilistic thinking in the classroom. Grounded in an analysis of the literature, this article offers a lesson sequence for developing students’ probabilistic understanding. In particular, a context familiar to teachers—exploring compound events that occur in a game of chance—is presented, and it is demonstrated how the context can be used to explore the relationship between experimental and theoretical probabilities in a classroom setting. The approach integrates both the content and the language of probability and is grounded in socio-cultural theory.

First published November 2016 at Statistics Education Research Journal Archives

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Published

2016-11-30