Basic mental models of integrals: theoretical conception, development of a test instrument, and first results

Greefrath G, Oldenburg R, Siller HS, Ulm V, Weigand HG

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

A basic mental model (BMM—in German ‘Grundvorstellung’) of a mathematical concept is a content-related interpretation that gives meaning to this concept. This paper defines normative and individual BMMs and concretizes them using the integral as an example. Four BMMs are developed about the concept of definite integral, sometimes used in specific teaching approaches: the BMMs of area, reconstruction, average, and accumulation. Based on theoretical work, in this paper we ask how these BMMs could be identified empirically. A test instrument was developed, piloted, validated and applied with 428 students in first-year mathematics courses. The test results show that the four normative BMMs of the integral can be detected and separated empirically. Moreover, the results allow a comparison of the existing individual BMMs and the requested normative BMMs. Consequences for future developments are discussed.

Details about the publication

JournalZDM - Mathematics Education (ZDM)
Volume53
Issue3
Page range649-661null
StatusPublished
Release year2021
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1007/s11858-020-01207-0
Keywordsbasic mental model; Grundvorstellung; calculus

Authors from the University of Münster

Greefrath, Gilbert
Professorship of Mathematics Didactics with a focus on secondary schools (Prof. Greefrath)