Abstract
This research examines misconceptions in probability held by a sample of pre-service
primary teacher education students. Questions were selected and modified from those
reported in the research literature in order to examine; the misuse of heuristics, a false
assumption of equal likelihood, misunderstanding of independence, awareness of counter intuitive
probabilities, and belief in other fallacies. Questions were accompanied with a
request to explain the reasoning employed. Explanations were partitioned into disjoint
categories according to the type of misconception and cognitive level of response. Results
of selected questions and a summary of the response levels are presented here for
discussion.
Robert Peard
Problems With Probability