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Researching the learning of geometrical concepts in the secondary classroom: problems and possibilities

Researching the learning of geometrical concepts in the secondary classroom: problems and possibilities
Researching the learning of geometrical concepts in the secondary classroom: problems and possibilities
Researching the learning of geometrical concepts in the secondary classroom presents both problems and opportunities. The specification of the geometry curriculum, the need to concretise abstract geometrical objects for classroom activities, the role of the teacher and the need to reconsider geometrical notions from different viewpoints are all factors which affect the acquisition of geometrical concepts by pupils. These factors can provide problems for the researcher. Yet there are also significant opportunities both to influence policy decisions and to contribute to both theoretical and practical debates regarding the teaching and learning of geometry.
pedagogy, curriculum, teaching, learning, intuition, geometry, intuitive, drawing, measurement, imagining, manipulating, figures, mathematics, geometric, geometrical, deductive, reasoning, proof, proving, school, Euclid, Euclidean, van Hiele, dynamic geometry, DGS, DGE
1463-6840
31-34
Jones, Keith
ea790452-883e-419b-87c1-cffad17f868f
Jones, Keith
ea790452-883e-419b-87c1-cffad17f868f

Jones, Keith (1995) Researching the learning of geometrical concepts in the secondary classroom: problems and possibilities. Proceedings of the British Society for Research into Learning Mathematics, 15 (2), 31-34.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Researching the learning of geometrical concepts in the secondary classroom presents both problems and opportunities. The specification of the geometry curriculum, the need to concretise abstract geometrical objects for classroom activities, the role of the teacher and the need to reconsider geometrical notions from different viewpoints are all factors which affect the acquisition of geometrical concepts by pupils. These factors can provide problems for the researcher. Yet there are also significant opportunities both to influence policy decisions and to contribute to both theoretical and practical debates regarding the teaching and learning of geometry.

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More information

Published date: 1995
Keywords: pedagogy, curriculum, teaching, learning, intuition, geometry, intuitive, drawing, measurement, imagining, manipulating, figures, mathematics, geometric, geometrical, deductive, reasoning, proof, proving, school, Euclid, Euclidean, van Hiele, dynamic geometry, DGS, DGE
Organisations: Mathematics, Science & Health Education

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 41317
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/41317
ISSN: 1463-6840
PURE UUID: 9e068af4-f51b-4d32-808b-a93eb19d39f6
ORCID for Keith Jones: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3677-8802

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 23 Aug 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 08:27

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