Abstract
When students move from school to university they have to overcome many problems, academic, social and personal. One of the important factors influencing this transition is the students? own expectations. In this study we have undertaken an investigation of mathematics students in the UK and in Portugal. We concentrated on exploring how students felt their university experience would compare with school, in a number of areas, covering aspects of their own work and study regimes, the anticipated conditions of learning and their interactions with mathematics. The work was part of a wider investigation of the transition from school to university mathematics carried out at the University of Southampton in the UK, and Universidade do Minho (Braga) in Portugal, made possible by a grant from the British Council Treaty of Windsor programme. We conclude that in a number of important areas the students? expectations are not realised, in significant ways. It is also clear that in some areas there are differences between the UK and Portugal, and this suggests that the issues should be explored in relation to other countries as well.
Keith Hirst, Susan Meacock and Elfrida Ralha