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Skimming: a response to Weber and Mejia-Ramos

journal contribution
posted on 2013-01-09, 13:09 authored by Matthew InglisMatthew Inglis, Lara AlcockLara Alcock
We recently reported a study in which undergraduate students and research mathematicians were asked to read and validate purported proofs (Inglis & Alcock, 2012). In our eye-movement data, we found no evidence of the initial skimming strategy hypothesized by Weber (2008). Weber and Mejía-Ramos (2013) argued that this was due to a flawed analysis of eye-movement data and that a more fine-grained analysis led to the opposite conclusion. Here we demonstrate that this is not the case, and show that their analysis is based on an invalid assumption. Weber and Mejía-Ramos (2013) suggested that our analysis was flawed because, after calculating what proportion of reading time a mathematician took to reach the last line of a proof (which they called an Initial Reading [IR] ratio), we took means across different tasks. Considering means, they argued, obscures reading strategy variation. Clearly, this is true in principle, and at the end of this response, we discuss what exactly is obscured in our data. First, however, we respond to Weber and Mejía-Ramos’s more specific criticisms.

History

School

  • Science

Department

  • Mathematics Education Centre

Citation

INGLIS, M. and ALCOCK, L., 2013. Skimming: a response to Weber and Mejía-Ramos. Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 44 (2), pp. 471 - 474.

Publisher

© National Council of Teachers of Mathematics

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Publication date

2013

Notes

Closed access. This article was published in the Journal for Research in Mathematics Education (JRME) [© National Council of Teachers of Mathematics] http://www.nctm.org and high-resolution versions of the plots referred to in the paper are available at: https://dspace.lboro.ac.uk/dspace-jspui/handle/2134/10725

Language

  • en

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