Abstract
At times in the past ten years, politicians, educators and business people have deplored
the decline in the mathematical ability of adolescents and older young people. Generally
it has been the arithmetical skills which have been criticised.
This· paper attempts to compare the understandings of primary teacher education
students in their first weeks at University in 1994 with those of a similar group of
students at two NSW Teachers' Colleges in 1964. The 1964 sample completed an
achievement test and a test of mathematical understanding. As well, a small group were
interviewed to determine any obvious attitudinal factors related to achievement and
understanding.
The 1994 sample consisted of 162 students in their second week of a pre-service teacher
education course. In this case, as the students were to be given an achievement test later
in the semester, only the survey of mathematical understandings was administered. The
responses were analysed using data related to the upper, middle and lower thirds of the
scores. This provided information about the topics which students found difficult and
enabled a comparison with the previous results.