Students’ Readiness in Solving Contextual PISA-like Items: A Focus on Procedural Fluency and Adaptive Reasoning
Final Defense
Students’ Readiness in Solving Contextual PISA-like Items: A Focus on Procedural Fluency and Adaptive Reasoning
by Donna D. Bautista
MS Mathematics Education Candidate
Date: Friday, 14 July 2023
Time: 10 am
Venue: SEC A 321
Advisers:
Catherine P. Vistro-Yu, EdD
Ateneo de Manila University
Panelists:
Lester C. Hao, PhD (Critic Reader)
Ateneo de Manila University
Maria Theresa T. Fernando
Ateneo de Manila University
Agnes D. Garciano, PhD
Ateneo de Manila University
Evangeline Golla, PhD
Philippine Normal University
Following the Updated Philippine Development Plan, the Philippines made its inaugural participation in the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) in 2018. Results from this assessment showed that only 19% of the participating Filipino students can perceive and recognize how a basic situation can be represented mathematically. Hence, this study was initiated to assist mathematics educators in comprehending the underwhelming performance of Filipino students in PISA 2018. This study aimed to determine if context, specifically context familiarity and context complexity, had any significant impact on students’ performance in PISA-like items. The study utilized a mixed methods research design and involved forty-four Grade 9 students enrolled in a private school in Region 1. The students completed three sets of test materials: computational items, simple context items, and PISA-like items. Validated rubrics were used to assess students’ procedural fluency and adaptive reasoning. Interviews were conducted after all test materials were administered. The results show that students scored low in PISA-like items, and average in both simple context items and computational items. The results of Analysis of Variance and Tukey’s HSD Post Hoc Analysis further show that students’ procedural fluency and adaptive reasoning significantly differed between computational items and PISA-like items and between simple context items and PISA-like items. It can be concluded that context contributes to the low performance of students in PISA-like items. In addition, the checklist on context familiarity and the interviews revealed that familiarity with the context does not contribute to students’ performance on PISA-like items. However, it was observed that context complexity negatively impacts their performance on PISA-like items. For a better understanding of Filipino students’ performance in PISA, this study strongly recommends further investigations on the other strands of mathematical proficiency.
Key Words: Adaptive Reasoning, Contextual PISA-like Items, Procedural Fluency, Students’ Readiness