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particular by social psychologists at Geneva (cf. the collective book edited
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1994 Book DidacticsOfMathematicsAsAScien
particular by social psychologists at Geneva (cf. the collective book edited by Mugny, 1985). According to this theory, the contradiction coming from two opposite points of view is more readily perceived and cannot be refuted so easily as the contradiction coming from facts for an individual. The latter may either not perceive the contradiction or not take it into account when wavering between two opposite points of view and finally choosing one of them. In order to master a task, students working jointly are committed to overcoming conflict. When attempting to solve the contradiction, they may manage to coordinate the two points of view into a third one overcoming both initial points of view and corresponding to a higher level of knowl- edge. This is the starting point for learning. The above-mentioned social psychologists have tested the theory on the construction of general schemas studied by Piaget, like the schema concerning the conservation of liquids or of lengths. When we organized group work situations with students solving mathematical problems, we could also observe the construction of a new so- lution of higher conceptual level and the overcoming of the contradiction between the partners. Let me give two examples: In a situation in which two students had to describe a geometrical dia- gram in a written message meant for two other students who did not know the diagram, the labeling of some elements of the diagram by the producers of the message often appeared as a solution overcoming the partners' dis- agreement about their mutual formulations in natural language: Each pro- posal was judged as erroneous or too complex by each partner and as pos- sibly leading the receivers to a misunderstanding. Labeling some elements provided a means that was accepted as an unambiguous and economical way when describing elements depending on the labeled elements: Instead of writing "the line joining the point we made to the other point we have just drawn," they could write: "join Point A to Point B" (Laborde, 1982). The example of a situation of ordering decimal numbers also illustrates how students can construct a new correct strategy when they have to decide between two strategies giving different results (Coulibaly, 1987). Leonard and Grisvard (1981, 1983) have shown that sorting a sequence of decimal numbers may pose a problem even for older students, and that with striking regularity, two erroneous rules often underlie the students' solutions: 1. A rule R1 according to which among two decimal numbers having the same whole part, the bigger one is the number with the bigger decimal part, this latter being considered as a whole number; for example: 149 WORKING IN SMALL GROUPS 0.514 > 0.6 because 514 > 6 or 0.71 > 0.006 because 71 > 6. 2. A rule R2 according to which among two decimal numbers having the same whole part, the bigger one is the number with the decimal part having the smaller number of digits; for example: 0.6 > 0.514 because 0.514 has three digits after the decimal point, while 0.6 has only one digit after the decimal point, but 0.5 > 0.514 or 0.71 > 0.006. One may be convinced of the strength of these rules insofar as, in some cases, they provide correct results. Teachers are very often not aware of these erroneous rules followed by their students, because they have access only to their final answers and not to the reasoning leading to them. Students are thus reinforced in their erroneous strategies. I leave to the reader the pleasure to check that, when R1 and R2 give the same answer, they are correct, while, when the results are contradictory, obviously only one of them is false. But the consequence of this observation is important from a didactical point of view. It implies that well-chosen numbers may al- low the teacher or the experimenter to find which rule is followed by the student in the task of sorting decimal numbers. We must indeed note that it has very often been observed that a student's answers can be described by only one rule. The experiment carried out by Coulibaly determined the rules underlying 8th-grade students' answers to a written test. Four pairs of students were formed by putting together students following different rules. Each pair then had to jointly order five sequences of decimal numbers and to elaborate a written explanation meant for other younger students on how to compare decimal numbers. The sequences were carefully chosen in order to provoke contradictions between R1 and R2. The first question gave rise to a conflict for three pairs, and for two of them, the conflict led to a new rule R'1 over- coming the contradiction: This rule consists in giving the same length to the decimal parts by adding the adequate number of zeros to the right of the shorter decimal part. So Chrystel thought that 7.5 is less than 7.55, while Cecile argued for the reversed order; Chrystel convinced Cecile by proposing that she puts the same number of digits to both decimal parts: 7.5 equals 7.50 and 7.50 was recognized by Cecile as less than 7.55. This new rule, which is adapted from R1, avoids the application of R2 and overcomes the conflict. It never occurred in the prior written test. It is noteworthy that these pairs elaborating the rule R'1 applied it in the next questions and could formulate it in the explanation meant for younger stu- dents. Three consequences can be drawn from this example: 1. A social interaction could lead to a conflict, because of the choice of the numbers to be compared and of the composition of the pairs (students operating according to two different rules). 150 151 2. A conflict did not systematically appear in all cases in which it could have appeared. 3. Conflicts were not necessarily solved by the construction of a new rule. This brings me to claim that the outcome of such social contradiction de- pends on several factors, some of which can be more or less controlled, such as the choice of the task variables of the problem given to the students. (By task variables, I mean features of the problem whose variations imply changes in the students' solving strategies; these variables, when used to promote learning, are also called "variables didactiques," didactical variables, in France.) The effect of the other ones linked to the individuals involved in the interaction is more uncertain: A social negotiation between two individuals is not predetermined, and all the past experience of each Download 5.72 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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