This Author published in this journals
All Journal Brillo Journal
Marsyandia, Inaara Pangesti
Unknown Affiliation

Published : 1 Documents Claim Missing Document
Claim Missing Document
Check
Articles

Found 1 Documents
Search

Assessing Students’ Mathematical Literacy through PISA Items in the Space and Shape Content Marsyandia, Inaara Pangesti; Nusantara, Duano Sapta; Gustiningsi, Tria
Brillo Journal Vol 5 No 1 (2025): -
Publisher : S&Co Publishing

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.56773/bj.v5i1.153

Abstract

This study aims to analyze students’ mathematical literacy in solving PISA problems, particularly in the space and shape domain. The research approach used is a qualitative approach. This type of research is qualitative descriptive approach. The study involved 27 ninth-grade students from one of Junior High School (JHS) in Kota Jambi. Data were collected through a written test using items adopted from the 2012 PISA Mathematics Released Problems, complemented by interviews to gain deeper insights. The results revealed that students’ mathematical literacy abilities were categorized into high, medium, and low levels. The results show that most students demonstrate low mathematical literacy skills. Based on the three indicators of mathematical literacy, students in the high-ability category were able to formulate mathematical models, employ geometric concepts appropriately, and interpret the results within the given context. Students in the medium category were able to perform correct procedures but were unable to derive meaningful conclusions, while students in the low category experienced difficulties in all indicators. These findings indicate that students’ mathematical literacy skills in geometry remain limited, particularly in reasoning and interpreting results. Therefore, learning activities that facilitate reasoning and provide more PISA-like tasks are needed to help strengthen students’ mathematical literacy, especially in space and shape problems. Future research may also explore the use of locally contextualized PISA-like tasks to provide students with more meaningful and relatable problem situations.