New research from Vanderbilt University has found students benefit more from being taught the concepts behind math problems rather than the exact procedures to solve the problems. The findings offer teachers new insights on how best to shape math instruction to have the greatest impact on student learning.
The research by Bethany Rittle-Johnson, assistant professor of psychology and human development at Vanderbilt University's Peabody College and Percival Mathews, a Peabody doctoral candidate, is in press at the Journal of Experimental Child Psychology.
"Teaching children the basic concept behind math problems was more useful than teaching children a procedure for solving the problems – these children gave better explanations and learned more," Rittle-Johnson said. "This adds to a growing body of research illustrating the importance of teaching children concepts as well as having them practice solving problems."
In math class, teachers typically demonstrate a procedure for solving a problem and then have children practice solving related problems, often with minimal explanation for why things work.
"With conceptual instruction, teachers explain a problem's underlying structure. That type of instruction enables kids to solve the problems without having been taught specific procedures and also to understand more about how problems work," Matthews said. "When you just show them how to do the problem they can solve it, but not necessarily understand what it is about. With conceptual instruction, they are able to come up with the procedure on their own."
The study also examined whether having the students explain their solution to problems helped improve their learning. To test this, the researchers used the conceptual teaching approach with all students, and had one group explain their solution while the other did not. They found no discernable difference in performance between the two groups. While self explanation has been found to be beneficial in previous studies, Rittle-Johnson and Matthews found that when the students were given a limited time to solve the problem, the benefit disappeared. This led them to suggest that part of the benefit of self explanation may come from the extra time a student spends thinking about that particular problem.
"Self explanation took more time, which left less time for practice solving the problems," Matthews said. "When time is unlimited, self-explanation gives students more time to repair faulty mental models. We found conceptual explanation may do the same thing and make self-explanation less useful."
Rittle-Johnson is an investigator in the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center for Research on Human Development and in the Vanderbilt Learning Sciences Institute. The research was funded by the U.S. Department of Education.
Comments
Indeed if one has merely learned something by rote, it is very difficult to deal with a similar but not identical circumstance, however where one understands the method and reasoning behind it one can extend ones capabilities into new areas by applying the same or a rationally modified set of principles.
Laurence Arnold | 04/11/09 | 07:16 AM
Nick (not verified) | 04/19/09 | 11:48 AM
Anonymous (not verified) | 09/02/09 | 07:05 AM












Teaching a procedure may be good for passing a test, but it doesn't give understanding. It can be a problem with test based learning if teachers teach to the test rather than teaching to achieve understanding. Instead of tests perhaps students should be assessed it whatever way they were assessed for this study, which claims to measure whether children "gave better explanations and learned more". "Giving explanations" does not sound like a usual test was used.