Students’ perceptions of institutional practices

Nadia Hardy has written an article called Students’ perceptions of institutional practices: the case of limits of functions in college level Calculus courses. The article has recently been published online in Educational Studies in Mathematics. Here is the abstract of her article:
This paper presents a study of instructors’ and students’ perceptions of the knowledge to be learned about limits of functions in a college level Calculus course, taught in a North American college institution. I modeled these perceptions using a theoretical framework that combines elements of the Anthropological Theory of the Didactic, developed in mathematics education, with a framework for the study of institutions developed in political science. While a model of the instructors’ perceptions could be formulated mostly in mathematical terms, a model of the students’ perceptions included an eclectic mixture of mathematical, social, cognitive, and didactic norms. I describe the models and illustrate them with examples from the empirical data on which they have been built.

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