Abstract
This chapter addresses a number of crucial theoretical issues about research on attitude towards mathematics, a field that has a very long tradition in mathematics education, with early studies on attitude being published more than 60 years ago. Over time, research on attitude in mathematics education has developed a range of perspectives and methodologies, dealing with a variety of questions concerning the construct of attitude: discussion and development of tools for measuring/assessing/observing it; analysis of the relationship with other affective constructs and with cognition; investigation of the relationship with achievement; critique of the lack of a suitable theoretical framework. The chapter traces the ‘story’ of the construct of attitude, providing a theoretical discussion of the issues mentioned above that are crucial to understanding the mosaic of relationships and interactions within the affect field. Through the theoretical debate, the aim of the chapter is to highlight new directions for research on attitude in mathematics education.
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Notes
- 1.
Later, De Bellis and Goldin (1999) propose ‘values’ as the fourth construct of the affective domain.
- 2.
The sample of the study was not chosen on a statistical basis, but we relied on the collaboration of teachers who voluntarily agreed to participate in our research.
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Di Martino, P., Zan, R. (2015). The Construct of Attitude in Mathematics Education. In: Pepin, B., Roesken-Winter, B. (eds) From beliefs to dynamic affect systems in mathematics education. Advances in Mathematics Education. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-06808-4_3
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