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Not seeing decimals as representing part of a unit quantityPerhaps the most basic knowledge about decimals is to understand
that both decimals and fractions are designed for the same purpose;
to express parts of the unit quantity. Even into the early years
of secondary school some students do not fully appreciate this.
Some children see the decimal point as separating two whole numbers.
At one extreme, they might see two quite separate numbers in one
decimal number. More commonly, children who have not completely
made the decimal-fraction link will think of two different types
of whole numbers making up a decimal such as 4.63, (perhaps as 4
whole numbers and 63 of another unit, rather like 4 goals and 63
behinds in Australian rules football). These children will tend
to select longer decimal numbers as larger. For example, they would
pick 4.63 as larger than 4.8. Many of them will be categorised as
whole number thinkers.
Over-reliance on money as a model can also lead to this "two
parallel whole numbers" interpretation, for those students
who think about dollars and cents, without fully appreciating the
role of a cent as a hundredth of a dollar.
Associating decimals with the wrong fractionsCommon fractions provide more information explicitly than do decimals.
The fraction 2/5, for example, indicates that the reference unit
(the "whole") has been divided into 5 equal parts and 2 of these
parts make up this fraction. In decimal notation, the denominator
(glossary) is hidden,
just as the place value (glossary)
of the columns in whole number numeration is hidden. Just as it
is simpler to see the Roman numeral XXXII as 3 tens (XXX) and 2
ones (II) than it is to see this structure in 32, so it is easier
to interpret the fraction 4/10 than the decimal 0.4 where the size
of the parts (tenths) is indicated only by the place value. Cognitive difficulties common to understanding both decimals and fractionsCoordinating number of parts and size of parts of a fractionBecause decimals and fractions are both used to describe parts
of a unit quantity, some of the difficulties that students show
in understanding fractions are evident in understanding decimals.
To understand the size of a fraction, the numerator and the denominator
must be considered simultaneously. The denominator indicates
the size of the parts into which the referent whole has been divided
and the numerator indicates how many parts there are. Not being
able to coordinate these two factors is a major developmental difficulty
in understanding both fractions and decimals. Partitioning, unitising and reunitisingPartitioning, unitising and reunitising are three cognitive processes that are required for dealing with common fractions and they also affect students' understanding of decimals. There is general agreement (Behr et al, 1992) that many students' difficulties relate to changes in the nature of the unit that they have to deal with. For example, to find three quarters of 24 counters, the counters are first thought of as individual units, then the 24 counters need to be perceived as a whole so that one quarter can be taken. Then three of these new composite units need to be taken to make three quarters. Decimals present problems especially with re-unitising between tenths and hundredths etc. For example to see 2 strips of a 100 square as representing
requires several cognitive steps. The initial counting units are the small squares (see diagram below). Two different composite units are created from these - a tenth is a new composite unit made from a strip of ten small squares and the whole square is a new composite unit, made of the 100 small squares. Seeing the square as being composed of 10 strips (each a tenth) requires the idea of a unit-of-units. Finally to talk about 0.2 of the square means that the square itself is a measure unit. (Baturo and Cooper, 1997)
When the whole is partitioned into tenths only, students need to only unitise once. There is only one measure unit invoked. Similarly if hundredths only are to be considered. However, when hundredths need to be perceived as both tenths and hundredths, as they are for recording decimals and for renaming places (e.g. 2 tenths = 20 hundredths), the cognition required is more complex. This depth of cognitive processing involved in dealing with multiple units underlies the difficulties that students have with the basic place value ideas and can be a cause of students' resorting to the simpler but erroneous misconceptions. |
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For information about this page, contact: Vicki Steinle
Contact Email Address: v.steinle@unimelb.edu.au
Department Homepage: www.edfac.unimelb.edu.au/DSME
Faculty Homepage: www.edfac.unimelb.edu.au/
Last modified: Thu 18 November 2004
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