Abstract
AbstractThis study identifies characteristics of polygon class learning opportunities for 8–9-year-old children during the whole-class instruction. We consider the interplay between the geometrical tasks demanding different ways of reasoning, features of children’s geometrical thinking, and the teacher’s moves to identify characteristics of learning opportunities. We identified 3 types of learning opportunities during whole-class instruction: (a) recognizing (initiating the deconstruction dimensional), (b) supporting children’s analytical reasoning, and (c) encouraging children to establish relations between attributes of the figures. Our findings highlight the holistic facet of the learning opportunities of geometry in primary education that connect the students’ geometrical arguments generated by solving enriching geometrical tasks and the teacher’s moves drawing on children’s geometrical thinking during the whole-class instruction. We conjectured that weaving these 3 aspects together supported the emergence of relevant geometric learning opportunities for children.
Funder
Ministry of Science and Technology
Universidad de Alicante
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Mathematics,Education
Reference42 articles.
1. Ambrose, R., & Kenehan, G. (2009). Children’s evolving understanding of polyhedra in the classroom. Mathematical Thinking and Learning, 11(3), 158–176. https://doi.org/10.1080/10986060903016484
2. Bartolini-Bussi, M. G., & Baccaglini-Frank, A. (2015). Geometry in early years: Sowing seeds for a mathematical definition of squares and rectangles. ZDM Mathematics Education, 47, 391–405. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11858-014-0636-5
3. Battista, M. T. (2007). The development of geometric and spatial thinking. In F. K. Lester (Ed.), Second handbook of research on mathematics teaching and learning (pp. 843–908). NCTM-IAP.
4. Battista, M., Clements, D., Arnoff, J., Battista, K., & Borrow, C. (1998). Students’ spatial structuring of 2D arrays of squares. Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 29(5), 503–532. https://doi.org/10.2307/749731
5. Bernabeu, M., Moreno, M., & Llinares, S. (2021a). Primary school students’ understanding of polygons and the relationships between polygons. Educational Studies in Mathematics, 106, 251–270. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10649-020-10012-1