Maths Sparks: Investigating the impact of outreach on pupils attitudes towards mathematics

Anthony Gerard Cronin, Aoibhinn Ni Shuilleabhain, Emily Lewanowski-Breen, Christopher Kennedy

Abstract


In this article, we examine the impact of participating in a series of mathematics workshops on secondary-school pupils attitudes towards mathematics. A six-week program, entitled Maths Sparks, was run by a team of lecturers and students at a research-intensive university in the Republic of Ireland. The outreach series aimed to promote mathematics to pupils from schools designated as socio-economically disadvantaged (DEIS - Delivering Equality of Opportunity in Schools), who are less likely to study mathematics at higher level than their non-DEIS counterparts (Smyth et al. 2015). Sixty-two pupils participated in the research and data was generated through pre-post questionnaires based on the Fennema-Sherman (1976) framework of Attitudes to Mathematics. Findings suggest that while male students initially had more positive attitudes towards mathematics, there was a narrowing in this gender gap across several factors on the Fennema-Sherman scale as a result of participation in the programme. The most prominent of these features were: Attitudes towards success in mathematics and Motivation towards mathematics. Findings suggest that the construct and delivery of this Mathematics outreach programme, involving undergraduate students and academic staff, may provide a useful structure in benefitting pupils attitudes towards mathematics and encouraging their study of the subject.


Keywords


mathematics outreach; widening participation; student-staff collaboration; pedagogy

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References


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DOI: https://doi.org/10.21100/msor.v15i3.535

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