Students' Academic and Emotional Struggles On Mathematics
Students' Academic and Emotional Struggles On Mathematics
ON MATHEMATICS
RELYN V. ACINERO
October 2015
INTRODUCTION
students’ ability level and/or experiences, serious achievement gaps result. Gap
exists, therefore, not only in the curriculum but between the learner and
students could remain “lost” for the duration of their education. Students who are
taught in a way that rely too heavy on rote memorization isolated from meaning
(Sherman et. al., 2014). A lack of sufficient mathematical skill and understanding
affects one’s ability to make critically important educational, life and career
decisions (NRC, 1989). Students may be mentally distract and have difficulty
relating to students with academic and emotional disturbance (ED). The current
views conduct to examine both the status of and trends in interventions design to
include in descriptive analysis, which spans the years from 1975 to 2002.
settings or research designs and dependent and independent variables ( Allyn et.
on a scale of six levels, Portugal still has in the region of 25% of their students at
over time (Nelson, 2001). Many students struggle to act purposefully and
strategically for their academic benefit in the school setting (Levendoski, 2000).
Mathematics?
2. What are the factors affecting students academic and emotional struggles
on Mathematics?
3. What are the aids in order to lessen the academic and emotional struggles
on Mathematics?
struggles on Mathematics.
Specifically, it aims to:
mathematics are.
struggles on Mathematics.
struggles on Mathematics?
To the Students: The result of the study helps them to change their strategic
that they can determine their struggles and to apply the aids that can help them
To the Teachers: This study will provide information on what strategies they will
use in order for the students to easily grasp the lesson. It helps them in realizing
some mistakes causing the students to struggle and apply some techniques that
To the Administrators: The findings of the study will be evidence that the
school should have an intervention and set goals to lessen the students’
academic and emotional struggle on Mathematics. This study will be their basis
their struggles.
2016.
The terms are operationally defined according to their use in the study:
disturb or distracted.
important but difficult goal. Being aware of the students’ difficulties and sources
of the difficulties and designing instruction to diminish them are important steps in
achieving their goal. Students fall below their expected level of mathematics
achievement for a variety of reasons. When asked why they were not as
understood math,” or “never liked it because it was too abstract and did not relate
to them. Academic struggles namely, (a) Aiming for passing grade in the subject
matter, (b) understanding brain types, (c) teacher’s move on before everyone is
ready, (d) longing for the missing blocks- this is a legitimate cause for anxiety. If
you avoided math in lower grades or you just didn't pay enough attention in
middle school, you may be feeling stressed out because you know your
true that math involves some very complex formulas. Remember the process for
overcoming any fear? Isolate it, examine it, and break it down into little parts.
That's exactly what you have to do in math. Every formula is made of "little parts"
or skills and steps that you've learned in the past. It's a matter of building blocks
(Carino, 2005).
Students’ Emotional Struggle
attributable to factors beyond their control, such as luck. These students think
that if they scored well on a mathematics assignment, they did so only because
the content happened to be easy. These students do not attribute their success
achievement is due to factors beyond their control and do not acknowledge that
Students might also believe that failure is related to either the lack of innate
accidental and poor progress as inevitable. In doing so, they limit their capacity to
students with EBD indicated that the academic deficits occurred across academic
subject areas including reading, math, and writing (Trout et.al, 2003) and that the
waiting for the boring mathematics subject,(b) unconnected and not related with
the students,(c) math takes too much time and (d) analyzing stressful problems.
and physically not developed learns at a slower rate (d) Home Conditions and
Memory Ability (f) Meaningfulness of the subject matter (g) Teaching methods
Motivation
made relevant for students, they are more likely to become engaged and
Reading Instruction that we have examined extensively (Guthrie et. al., 2007).
reading helps them to make connections between their own lives, their interests,
and the text. For example, having a discussion about a child's recent trip to the
city may help get students' minds set for an upcoming text about urban
architecture.
concept to the class. Dissecting an owl pellet and observing the animal bones,
skulls and hair found within is a good way to bring quick personal experience to a
text about the survival mechanisms of the owl. These are some of the activities
text about the survival mechanisms of the owl. Students are much more likely to
pick up a book about owls and read it with engagement after such a hands-on
that are tightly linked to book reading activities was shown in one investigation by
Guthrie et. al., (2006). Reading growth was higher for students in classrooms
where there were a larger number of hands-on science activities (tightly linked to
reading activity in class relevant for students. Relevance gives them reason to
initiate and persist with the reading task. Students are also more likely to be
who create units of study that focus on some conceptual theme based on student
While providing experiences for students that activate and add to their
between ethnic groups. Unrau and Schlackman (2006) studied urban middle
school students' intrinsic motivation for reading. The middle school was located in
Los Angeles, and the majority of the students (about 75%) were Hispanic and
predicted reading achievement for the Asian students, but they did not find this
result for Hispanic students. With respect to intrinsic motivation, there was also a
direct effect on reading achievement for Asian students but not for Hispanic
students (Unrau et. al., 2006). It is, therefore, important to consider what cultural
values and what opportunities students are presented within the context of their
homes and communities. Including themes and texts from varied parts of the
well as cultures outside their own. Teachers who include texts and references to
the specific cultures represented in the classroom are more likely to engage
students, especially those who do not normally see their backgrounds reflected in
their reasons for reading increasingly become enjoyment rather than external
pressure.
Non-relevance Undermines Intrinsic Motivation: When teachers do not
assure the relevance of text or reading activity, students tend to avoid reading
(Assor et. al., 2002). For example, students may experience low relevance when
there are multiple unrelated topics within one lesson, with few or no links to
If they are consistently given texts and reading activities that are outside of
little reason for students to initiate reading the text, and even less chance that
students will become immersed in the reading. Over time, the readings will be
seen as tedious chores. Disliking the texts, students will tend to avoid reading
(Oldfather, 2002).
Maturation
but what does it really mean? This document provides some answers and
discusses how educators can use the concept of math maturity to better meet
their teaching and student learning goals. Here are four important
aspects/challenges of math education: (a) Math has long been a required part of
the school curriculum. This is because some math knowledge, skills, and ways of
thinking are deemed important for all students. (b)We know that math is quite
growing (d) We also know that students taking math courses vary widely in how
well they learn and understand the math, and how well they can apply their
Learning with understanding, applying/using math, and long term retention all
knowledge, skills, insights, ways of thinking, and habits of mind that endure over
the years. Most of us quickly or gradually forget many of the details of the math
that we have studied but do not routinely use. However, our success in
increasing our level of math maturity tends to stay with us and serve us for a
lifetime. Math has long been a required part of the school curriculum. This is
because some math knowledge, skills, and ways of thinking are deemed
How can teachers teach and how can students learn for increased math
maturity? These are the two unifying questions addressed in this document. The
others who are concerned about and involved in our informal and formal
educational systems.
suffers from a lack of long-term retention. It also suffers from the learner’s
Thus, math education is now moving in the direction of placing much more
gaining math-related "habits of mind and thinking skills" that will last a lifetime.
needs to learn how to learn math, how to self-assess his or her level of math
content knowledge, skills, and math maturity, how to make use of aids to doing
math, how to relearn math that has been forgotten or partially forgotten, how to
make effective use of online sources of math information and instruction, how to
make effective use of technological aids to both learning and doing math, and so
on.
Helping students learn subject matter involves more than the delivery of
intellectual resources to enable them to participate in, not merely to know about,
the major domains of human thought and inquiry. These include the past and its
relation to the present; the natural world; the ideas, beliefs, and values of our
own and other peoples; the dimensions of space and quantity; aesthetics and
ideas and skills as tools to gain control over every day, real-world problems.
capable of figuring things out--of using mathematics to define and reason through
writing a feeling, idea, or experience. They should both be able and inclined to
editor.
environment. Good teaching demands that teachers know a lot of other things--
for example, about learning, about their students, and about the cultural, social,
and political contexts within which they work. That teachers may hold such goals
for student learning that grow out of their study of subject matter does not,
place is where they will learn the various skills deemed necessary and proper for
them to achieve success in the global society. The classroom is where they will
gain an understanding of their place in the world and the gifts that they have to
offer it. It is where the student develops what they want their future to look like,
With the classroom being such an important place in the growth of a child
then every precaution should be taken to make sure that the learning
classroom can be set up in a way that stifles creativity or does not promote
positive learning environment. There are many things that can affect this
desks, or resources. Also, there are intangible elements such as the energy of
the classroom, the rules, or the sounds within the room. Each of these can
impact a student’s focus and achievement in the class. They can also affect a
The way in which a teacher organizes their class or how they control it, will
classroom. Similarly, if a teacher is motivated and positive they will likely have a
understand this cause and effect in order to understand how to organize their
classrooms today is to have desks aligned in rows within the classroom. This
system of arrangement seems to make students lose focus and creates a higher
Humans are social creatures that want attention, and if they aren’t going to
be able to get it from their classmates then they will commonly act out to get
attention from their teacher. One of the first areas that make a noticeable impact
can play a role in determining whether the classroom will be conducive for
learning. Each may not have a large effect individually, however together they
can work to strengthen a student’s ability to learn. When a student first steps into
a room they will make a judgment about the type of class they are going to be
taking. They will look to see how desks are arranged. They will notice what is
hanging on the walls. The way in which a teacher sets up their class allows them
centers or activity centers the students will know that this is a classroom that
likes to do hands-on experiments. It also conveys that they will not just sit and
take notes, but they will act out what ever subject they are learning. The wall art
will demonstrate to the student that the teacher cares about their work enough to
show it off. Students will also gain an understanding of the social expectations of
the teacher in the classroom based on how the desks are organized. Each of
If it is English, then the teacher could have a corner of the room set up like
a theatre where the students could act out scenes from various plays that they
are reading. There could be an area of the room with comfortable chairs and a
small library where they could pick a book to silently read if they have finished all
of their work for the day. This could be viewed as warm and inviting for a student
who does not like to read because now they see that English can involve moving
around. The small library will also allow them to choose what they want to read,
rather than them having to read what was assigned (Grubaugh et. al., 2013).
combinations and having students solve them and then repeat those that were
called before their turn can help. For example, the teacher would call out “3 X 5 =
15 and a student would respond with “15.” That student would then ask a number
question such as “7 - 5" of the group. The responder would reply, “3 X 5 = 15 and
7- 5 = 2.” The game continues as each player calls out a new fact and each
responder answers with all the previous combinations and the new answer.
Students’ ability to organize their thinking and use it to recall data will affect
People fail to connect math with real life. Many students look at a linear
peoples' interest level in math and prompt them to actually want to learn it.
Knowing how all those symbols translate to real life is crucial to how
objective subject, which means each problem has one correct solution and an
learn today builds upon the math you learned in the past. Also, the math you are
learning today is the foundation of all future mathematical learning. If the basic
concrete foundation (read: arithmetic) has cracks, you will almost certainly
struggle with future mathematical learning that involves more complexities and
abstractions (read: algebra and beyond). Unfortunately, many students move into
classroom (Genc et. al., 2004). Good teachers are able to create a learning
Peer Influence
change. Adolescences are dependent on their peers in their future plans and
his/her time discount behavior, it was found that it has influence on their
address the needs of these students through focused interventions. The guide
explicit and systematic, and should include models of proficient problem solving,
grade levels should devote about 10 minutes in each session to building fluent
retrieval of basic arithmetic facts; (7) Monitor the progress of students receiving
supplemental instruction and other students who are at risk; and (8) Include
included: (1) Postscript from the Institute of Education Sciences; (2) About the
how to reduce mathematics difficulty. They felt that teachers should teach
walk around the classroom to help students and answer questions and for
also suggested that students use self-help programs to answer their questions
about mathematics. Teachers must modify their teaching styles and teach a
minds repertoire of strategies. One teaching style cannot be used with all
students. For learning to take place, teachers need to use various teaching styles
and to help students, including those with learning difficulties, develop their own
learning strategies and are these strategies effectively and efficiently ( Callaham
through self-discovery. Equip yourself with the skills you need to improve the
impact you make; Mathematics Tutor, Math Program, Study Skills, Homework
and Understood your brain type, Make the learning process as concrete and
visual as possible. Use graphic organizers to provide visual prompts for written
expression. With math, use a peer tutor or paired learning with teachers. To aid
memory, use mnemonics (memory tricks) and “visual posting” of key information.
essay through use of an overhead projector, using color for demonstrations and
appropriate. Modify testing and grading by extending test time and dividing long-
term projects into segments. Parents should be notified of any long-term projects
to check that homework is written down and gets turned in. Use computers and
This study assumes that there are various students’ academic and
semester of SY 2015-2016.
METHODOLOGY
Research Design
Research Locale
Kidapawan City.
Research Respondents
The respondents of the study are the second year Mathematics Majors of
respondents to check “yes” or “no” to identify what particular struggle they do.
Sampling Procedure
present in this SY 2015-2016. The respondents are all require answering based
on their availability.
The research will secure a permit from the Campus Dean to conduct the
granted, the research set a schedule time to conduct the survey and the
and processed using the appropriate statistical treatment. The data obtained or
gathered from the questionnaires will be tabulated and used to determine its
weighted mean, frequency count and standard deviation in summarizing,
analyzing and computing the data on the assessment for each specification of
the respondents in regards with the students’ academic and emotional struggles
on Mathematics.
Republic of the Philippines
University of Southern Mindanao
Kidapawan City Campus
College of Industry and Technology
Sudapin, Kidapawan City
Madam:
Greetings of peace and prosperity!
The undersigned is a second year Bachelor of Secondary Education of this
College who will undergo a research entitled STUDENTS’ ACADEMIC AND
EMOTIONAL STRUGGLE ON MATHEMATICS.
In this connection, the undersigned wishes to request permission form your office
to allow her to conduct a survey among second year mathematics major students of
USM-KCC to find out what struggle they do in the field of mathematics. The data that
the researcher will gather will surely contribute to the success of this study.
Your kind and favorable approval in this matter is very much appreciated.
Thank you and more power!
Respectfully yours,
Approved by: