Abstract
The symposium presents findings from a cross-country study, drawing attention to dimensions of students’ learning by analysing students’ mathematics sense making and assessment performance in high performing but culturally different contexts—Australia and Singapore. The symposium details the performance of Australian and Singaporean students on tasks sourced from each country’s respective national assessment instruments; identifies the approaches and strategies students from different cultures employ to solve mathematics tasks; and draws conclusions about the influence cultural and pedagogical practices have on students’ approaches to solving these tasks.
Paper 4: Cross-country Comparisons of Student Sense Making: The Development of a Mathematics Processing Framework by Tom Lowrie. This paper identifies the strategies Singaporean and Australian students (n = 1187) employed to solve a 24-item mathematics test. A mathematics-processing framework is proposed, which describes the way primary-aged students successfully process graphic and nongraphic mathematics tasks. There were distinct differences in the way in which the students from the respective countries approached the tasks with the Singaporean students more likely to employ strategies that were explicitly taught and practices in the classroom.