The progression of preservice teachers' covariational reasoning as they model global warming

Keywords: mathematical modeling, climate change, preservice teachers, rate of change, Covariational reasoning

Abstract

The study examines how the covariational reasoning of three preservice mathematics teachers (PSTs) advances, and what they learned about an important metric in climate science, as they examine the link between carbon dioxide (CO2) pollution and global warming. The PSTs completed a mathematical task during an individual, task-based interview. Their responses were analyzed by complementing the Covariation Framework and the Change in Covarying Quantities Framework. The analysis revealed that the PSTs’ covariational reasoning increased in sophistication as they completed the task, advancing from describing direction of change to reasoning about the rate of change. Each level of sophistication supported/constrained the PSTs’ ability to specify nonlinear growth, anticipate concavity, draw accurate graphs, and make viable claims about the rate of change. The PSTs also learned about important ideas related to the forcing by CO2 as they completed the task, suggesting it is possible to learn mathematics while promoting climate change education.

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Título de la Revista: JOURNAL OF MATHEMATICAL BEHAVIOR
Notas: El Journal of Mathematical Behavior está indexado en Scopus. El editor catalogó el manuscrito como “revisar y reenviar”. Se está a la espera de que los revisores se cercioren que las revisiones sugeridas fueron atendidas.