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Articles

An Activity Theory approach in explaining engineering students’ difficulties with university mathematics

ORCID Icon, , , &
Pages 1571-1587 | Received 09 May 2020, Published online: 13 Nov 2020
 

ABSTRACT

In this paper we explore the difficulties engineering undergraduates encounter with tertiary mathematics. Results from our survey (N = 71) show that students in our sample face issues mostly related to the challenging nature of university mathematics, the absence of worked examples during lectures and the discontinuity of school and university mathematics curricula. By using third generation Activity Theory, we were able to interpret the identified difficulties as contradictions emerging between the school and university activity systems as well as within the university activity system, and we argue that these difficulties can be treated as stemming from the structural characteristics the two activity systems have.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

1 Project’s official page: https://item.chania.teicrete.gr.

4 European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System

5 These students explicitly reported not having any problems while studying mathematics (they provided answers to Q3 such as ‘No’, ‘No issues’ or ‘No problems at all’).

6 We acknowledge that other researchers consider lecturers and undergraduates belonging to different communities (e.g. Jaworski et al., Citation2012).

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