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How do high school students solve probability problems? A mixed methods study on probabilistic reasoning

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

When studying a complex research phenomenon, a mixed methods design allows to answer a broader set of research questions and to tap into different aspects of this phenomenon, compared to a monomethod design. This paper reports on how a sequential equal status design (QUAN â QUAL) was used to examine studentsâ reasoning processes when solving probability problems. Aselect clustered sampling resulted in the inclusion of 168 high school students in a first, quantitative phase, in which a questionnaire was used to assess how they solved probability problems. This questionnaire included probability items that were based on the outcome orientation, the representativeness misconception, and the equiprobability bias. In a second, qualitative phase, 18 students who were purposefully sampled from the first research phase were interviewed in order to in-depth study their probabilistic reasoning processes. In this paper we illustrate and discuss how several mixed methods research purposes were realized throughout our study: development, expansion, and initiation.
Journal: International Journal of Research & Method in Education
ISSN: 1743-727X
Issue: 2
Volume: 41
Pages: 184 - 206
Publication year:2018
Accessibility:Open