Harder things will stretch you further: helping first-year undergraduate students meaningfully engage with recent research papers in probability and statistics
Author(s) -
Nicholas Grindle,
Elinor Jones,
Paul J. Northrop
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
teaching mathematics and its applications an international journal of the ima
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.452
H-Index - 18
eISSN - 1471-6976
pISSN - 0268-3679
DOI - 10.1093/teamat/hraa001
Subject(s) - mathematics education , reading (process) , curriculum , undergraduate research , principal (computer security) , audience measurement , psychology , computer science , pedagogy , medical education , political science , medicine , law , operating system
Undergraduate research increasingly features in university mathematics degrees. Despite this, research papers are used infrequently in mathematics teaching, and this is especially the case for first-year undergraduates. Mathematical subjects are more likely than other STEM disciplines to pinpoint cognitive difficulty as the principal reason for not exposing undergraduate students to research papers. In this paper, we test whether first-year students can engage effectively with research papers. We describe an intervention that exposes first-year, first term undergraduate students to current research in probability and statistics by asking them to read a research paper and summarize it for a general readership following an interview with the paper’s author. Our findings show that the activity introduced students to new fields of knowledge and helped to develop a clearer understanding of scientific process, leading to a heightened sense of personal satisfaction at engaging closely with current research. We argue that structured reading of research papers can lead to productive and rewarding engagement with difficult content, recent and current research and with research processes and that this should make us reconsider the role of research papers in the undergraduate mathematics curriculum.
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