posted on 2021-11-30, 14:32authored byChristina Artemenko, Nicolas Masson, Carrie Georges, Hans-Christoph Nuerk, Krzysztof CiporaKrzysztof Cipora
Teachers are strong role models for their pupils, especially at the beginning of education. This
also holds true for math: If teachers feel anxious about math, the consequences on the mathematical
education of their pupils is detrimental.
Previous studies have shown that (future) elementary school teachers have higher levels of math
anxiety than most people studying other subjects. Here, we set out to conceptually replicate these
findings (e.g., meta-analysis by Hembree, 1990) by comparing math anxiety levels of pre-service and
in-service German and Belgian elementary school teachers to a reference group of German university
students from various fields of study. Moreover, we questioned this finding by asking which
elementary school teachers experience math anxiety, considering gender, specialization, and
experience, and investigated how math anxiety relates to teaching attitudes towards math.
We replicated the previous finding by showing that female elementary school teachers have a
higher level of math anxiety as compared to other female students. Importantly, female elementary
school teachers without math specialization indeed had higher levels of math anxiety than female
students from other fields and almost a quarter of them experience critical math anxiety. In contrast,
female elementary school teachers with math specialization did not show an increased level of math
anxiety as compared to the reference sample. Considering that not only these but all teachers,
regardless of specialization, teach math in elementary school in the investigated educational systems,
the math anxiety of elementary school teachers is a potential problem for their pupils’ math attitudes
and learning.
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