Written Answer

Monitoring Word Problems in Primary School Mathematics and Its Impact on Examination and PSLE Results

Speakers

Summary

This question concerns Dr Tan Wu Meng’s inquiry into the role of primary school mathematics word problems and whether English language fluency affects student results in examinations like the PSLE. Minister for Education Lawrence Wong noted that word problems help students see the relevance of mathematics through real-world contexts, provided the language used does not become a barrier to learning. To address this, the Ministry of Education ensures that examination language is clear and appropriate by monitoring metrics such as reading load, language demand, and word counts. The ministry also conducts workshops and provides guidelines for schools to help them pitch school-based assessments at age-appropriate levels while managing difficulty and context. Minister for Education Lawrence Wong concluded that the ministry remains committed to guiding schools so that mathematics word problems are appropriately pitched to support meaningful student learning.

Transcript

24 Dr Tan Wu Meng asked the Minister for Education (a) what is the current pedagogical role of word problems in Primary school mathematics; (b) whether the linguistic complexity and reading ease of such word problems in examinations is monitored and, if so, by what metrics; and (c) whether the Ministry has studied the impact of English language fluency on students' Mathematics results in Primary school and the PSLE and, if so, what are the findings.

Mr Lawrence Wong: The relationship between English Language and mathematics competency is well established in research studies. Learning mathematics requires students to understand both the mathematical concepts and the language to express those concepts. Word problems can allow learning of mathematics to be meaningful by using real world context to help students see the relevance of mathematics. That is why word problems are widely used in mathematics education globally.

Nevertheless, we recognise that overly complex word problems can cause confusion among young learners, and be a barrier to learning mathematics. Hence MOE makes a conscious effort to ensure that the language used in the national and school-based mathematics examinations is appropriate and clear. MOE also provides guidelines and conduct workshops to help schools pitch their school-based examinations appropriately. This includes managing the difficulty level and using language and context at age-appropriate levels. Managing reading load, language demand and word counts are carefully observed as part of test and examination construction.

MOE will continue to guide schools in teaching and learning and ensure that mathematics word problems are appropriately pitched.