Mathematics Anxiety and Metacognitive Processes: Proposal for a New Line of Inquiry

Authors

  • Kinga Morsanyi Queen's University Belfast, Belfast
  • Niamh Ní Cheallaigh Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, UK; Maastricht University, Maastricht
  • Rakefet Ackerman Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa

Keywords:

confidence, Diminishing Criterion Model, learning, meta-reasoning, mathematics anxiety, problem solving

Abstract

This paper presents a proposal for a new area of investigation that connects the metacognition literature, and especially the recently developed meta-reasoning framework, with research into mathematical reasoning, mathematics learning, and mathematics anxiety. Whereas the literature on mathematics anxiety focusses on the end result of learning and problem-solving, the metacognitive approach can offer further insight by a fine-grained analysis of the stages of these processes. In particular, it provides tools for exposing students' initial assessment of tasks and test situations, the targets they set for themselves, the process of monitoring progress, and decisions to stick with or abandon a particular solution. The paper outlines various ways in which the metacognitive approach could be used to investigate the effects of mathematics anxiety on mathematics learning and problem solving. This approach could help in answering questions like: Do anxious and non-anxious learners differ in how they prepare for an exam? Are anxious students more or less prone to overconfidence than non-anxious students? What metacognitive decisions mediate maths anxious participants' tendency to give up on problems too early? Additionally, this line of work has the potential to significantly expand the scope of metacognitive investigations and provide novel insights into individual differences in the metacognitive regulation of learning and problem solving. It could also offer some practical benefits by focusing the attention of educational designers on particular components within the learning process of anxious students.

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Published

2019-05-02

Issue

Section

Articles