An inferentialist perspective on the coordination of actions and reasons involved in making a statistical inference

被引:12
作者
Bakker A. [1 ]
Ben-Zvi D. [2 ]
Makar K. [3 ]
机构
[1] Freudenthal Institute, Utrecht University, Utrecht
[2] Faculty of Education, The University of Haifa, Haifa
[3] School of Education, The University of Queensland, St Lucia
基金
澳大利亚研究理事会;
关键词
Inferentialism; Laboratory education; Statistical inference; Uncertainty; Vocational education; Webs of reasons and actions;
D O I
10.1007/s13394-016-0187-x
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
To understand how statistical and other types of reasoning are coordinated with actions to reduce uncertainty, we conducted a case study in vocational education that involved statistical hypothesis testing. We analyzed an intern’s research project in a hospital laboratory in which reducing uncertainties was crucial to make a valid statistical inference. In his project, the intern, Sam, investigated whether patients’ blood could be sent through pneumatic post without influencing the measurement of particular blood components. We asked, in the process of making a statistical inference, how are reasons and actions coordinated to reduce uncertainty? For the analysis, we used the semantic theory of inferentialism, specifically, the concept of webs of reasons and actions—complexes of interconnected reasons for facts and actions; these reasons include premises and conclusions, inferential relations, implications, motives for action, and utility of tools for specific purposes in a particular context. Analysis of interviews with Sam, his supervisor and teacher as well as video data of Sam in the classroom showed that many of Sam’s actions aimed to reduce variability, rule out errors, and thus reduce uncertainties so as to arrive at a valid inference. Interestingly, the decisive factor was not the outcome of a t test but of the reference change value, a clinical chemical measure of analytic and biological variability. With insights from this case study, we expect that students can be better supported in connecting statistics with context and in dealing with uncertainty. © 2017, The Author(s).
引用
收藏
页码:455 / 470
页数:15
相关论文
共 51 条
[1]  
Ainley J., Pratt D., Hansen A., Connecting engagement and focus in pedagogic task design, British Educational Research Journal, 32, 1, pp. 23-38, (2006)
[2]  
Arnold P., Budgett S., Pfannkuch M., Experiment-to-causation inference: the emergence of new considerations regarding uncertainty. Proceedings of the Eighth International Research Forum on Statistical Thinking, Reasoning and Literacy (srtl-8) (pp. 119–146). Two Harbors, MN: The University of Minnesota, (2013)
[3]  
Bakker A., Characterising and developing vocational mathematical knowledge, Educational Studies in Mathematics, 86, 2, pp. 151-156, (2014)
[4]  
Implications of technology on what students need to know about statistics, Mit Werkzeugen Mathematik und Stochastik lernen—using tools for learning mathematics and statistics, pp. 143-152, (2014)
[5]  
Bakker A., Akkerman S.F., A boundary-crossing approach to support students’ integration of statistical and work-related knowledge, Educational Studies in Mathematics, (2014)
[6]  
Bakker A., Derry J., Lessons from inferentialism for statistics education, Mathematical Thinking and Learning, 13, pp. 5-26, (2011)
[7]  
Bakker A., Kent P., Derry J., Noss R., Hoyles C., Statistical inference at work: the case of statistical process control, Statistics Education Research Journal, 7, 2, pp. 130-145, (2008)
[8]  
Bakker A., Wijers M., Jonker V., Akkerman S.F., The use, nature and purposes of measurement in intermediate-level occupations, ZDM—The International Journal on Mathematics Education, 43, 5, pp. 737-746, (2011)
[9]  
Ben-Zvi D., Scaffolding students’ informal inference and argumentation, Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Teaching Statistics (CD-ROM), Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, July, 2006, (2006)
[10]  
Ben-Zvi D., Aridor K., Children’s wonder how to wander between data and context, The teaching and learning of statistics: international perspectives, pp. 25-36, (2016)