Summer School versus Term-time for Fundamental Mathematics at the Tertiary Level

Authors

  • David Easdown University of Sydney
  • George Papadopoulos University of Sydney
  • Collin Zheng University of Sydney

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30722/IJISME.27.05.002

Abstract

In a study from 2008 to 2009, academics at the University of Sydney initiated the gathering and preliminary analysis of qualitative and quantitative evidence, supporting the claim that students undertaking first year mathematics units of study achieve superior learning outcomes, and experience higher overall course satisfaction, by completing units at summer school rather than during term-time. This article includes a follow-up study, focusing on two fundamental mathematics units of study taken by students at the University of Sydney over the period 2007 to 2014. We consider the relative performance of students who failed one or both of these units in term-time and then attempted the unit or units again at the Sydney Summer School. The median increase in numerical grades, in the order of ten to fifteen percentage points, appears to be significant, and often translates, in individual cases, to one or more qualitative leaps upwards, from superficial towards deep learning, in terms of phases in the SOLO taxonomy, or in terms of successful navigation through liminal space, in the theory of threshold concepts.

Author Biographies

David Easdown, University of Sydney

School of Mathematics and Statistics

George Papadopoulos, University of Sydney

School of Mathematics and Statistics

Collin Zheng, University of Sydney

School of Mathematics and Statistics

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Published

17-07-2019

Issue

Section

Research Articles