Volume 120, Issue 2 p. 104-115
RESEARCH PAPER – MATHEMATICS EDUCATION

Conceptualizations of slope in Mexican intended curriculum

Crisólogo Dolores Flores

Corresponding Author

Crisólogo Dolores Flores

Research Center in Educational Mathematics of the Faculty of Mathematics from the Autonomous University of Guerrero, Chilpancingo, Gro., México

Correspondence

Crisólogo Dolores Flores, Research Center in Educational Mathematics of the Faculty of Mathematics from the Autonomous University of Guerrero, Chilpancingo, Mexico, CP 39000.

Emails: cdolores2@gmail.com; cdolores@prodigy.net.mx; cdolores@uagro.mx

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Martha Iris Rivera López

Martha Iris Rivera López

Research Center in Educational Mathematics of the Faculty of Mathematics from the Autonomous University of Guerrero, Chilpancingo, Gro., México

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Deborah Moore-Russo

Deborah Moore-Russo

Department of Mathematics, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK

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First published: 11 February 2020
Citations: 6

Abstract

Slope is a fundamental mathematics concept in middle and high school that transcends to the university level. An understanding of slope is needed at the university level since slope plays an important role in understanding problems involving variation and change. In this study Mexican curricula documents were examined to determine which conceptualizations of slope are addressed in the intended mathematics curriculum. To explain the results, we use conceptualizations of slope identified in previous research. Our findings reveal that, to a certain extent, the conceptualizations proposed in the Mexican intended mathematics curriculum differ slightly in terms of the emphasis and timing of instruction from what others have identified in the U.S., with slope as a geometric ratio receiving less emphasis in the Mexican curriculum. There was also noted discontinuity within the Mexican curriculum in introducing slope in grade 9 and subsequently introducing of linear functions in grade 10 without explicit mention of slope. Suggestions are made for future studies, both to consider the conceptualizations of slope promoted in the Mexican textbooks and the impact they have in classroom instruction and student learning of slope.

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