Understanding students’ misconceptions: An analysis of final Grade 12 examination questions in geometry

The role geometry plays in real life makes it a core component of mathematics that students must understand and master. Conceptual knowledge of geometric concepts goes beyond the development of skills required to manipulate geometric shapes. This study is focused on errors students made when solvi...

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Main Author: Kakoma Luneta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2015-06-01
Series:Pythagoras
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pythagoras.org.za/index.php/pythagoras/article/view/261
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spelling doaj-305e962e5b4b4bc58ada2ed704f37be02020-11-24T23:52:43ZengAOSISPythagoras1012-23462223-78952015-06-01361e1e1110.4102/pythagoras.v36i1.261173Understanding students’ misconceptions: An analysis of final Grade 12 examination questions in geometryKakoma Luneta0Department of Childhood Education, University of JohannesburgThe role geometry plays in real life makes it a core component of mathematics that students must understand and master. Conceptual knowledge of geometric concepts goes beyond the development of skills required to manipulate geometric shapes. This study is focused on errors students made when solving coordinate geometry problems in the final Grade 12 examination in South Africa. An analysis of 1000 scripts from the 2008 Mathematics examination was conducted. This entailed a detailed analysis of one Grade 12 geometry examination question. Van Hiele levels of geometrical thought were used as a lens to understand students’ knowledge of geometry. Studies show that Van Hiele levels are a good descriptor of current and future performance in geometry. This study revealed that whilst students in Grade 12 are expected to operate at level 3 and level 4, the majority were operating at level 2 of Van Hiele’s hierarchy. The majority of students did not understand most of the basic concepts in Euclidian transformation. Most of the errors were conceptual and suggested that students did not understand the questions and did not know what to do as a result. It is also noted that when students lack conceptual knowledge the consequences are so severe that they hardly respond to the questions in the examination.https://pythagoras.org.za/index.php/pythagoras/article/view/261Geometryvan Hiele levelsmisconceptionserrorscoordinate goemetry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kakoma Luneta
spellingShingle Kakoma Luneta
Understanding students’ misconceptions: An analysis of final Grade 12 examination questions in geometry
Pythagoras
Geometry
van Hiele levels
misconceptions
errors
coordinate goemetry
author_facet Kakoma Luneta
author_sort Kakoma Luneta
title Understanding students’ misconceptions: An analysis of final Grade 12 examination questions in geometry
title_short Understanding students’ misconceptions: An analysis of final Grade 12 examination questions in geometry
title_full Understanding students’ misconceptions: An analysis of final Grade 12 examination questions in geometry
title_fullStr Understanding students’ misconceptions: An analysis of final Grade 12 examination questions in geometry
title_full_unstemmed Understanding students’ misconceptions: An analysis of final Grade 12 examination questions in geometry
title_sort understanding students’ misconceptions: an analysis of final grade 12 examination questions in geometry
publisher AOSIS
series Pythagoras
issn 1012-2346
2223-7895
publishDate 2015-06-01
description The role geometry plays in real life makes it a core component of mathematics that students must understand and master. Conceptual knowledge of geometric concepts goes beyond the development of skills required to manipulate geometric shapes. This study is focused on errors students made when solving coordinate geometry problems in the final Grade 12 examination in South Africa. An analysis of 1000 scripts from the 2008 Mathematics examination was conducted. This entailed a detailed analysis of one Grade 12 geometry examination question. Van Hiele levels of geometrical thought were used as a lens to understand students’ knowledge of geometry. Studies show that Van Hiele levels are a good descriptor of current and future performance in geometry. This study revealed that whilst students in Grade 12 are expected to operate at level 3 and level 4, the majority were operating at level 2 of Van Hiele’s hierarchy. The majority of students did not understand most of the basic concepts in Euclidian transformation. Most of the errors were conceptual and suggested that students did not understand the questions and did not know what to do as a result. It is also noted that when students lack conceptual knowledge the consequences are so severe that they hardly respond to the questions in the examination.
topic Geometry
van Hiele levels
misconceptions
errors
coordinate goemetry
url https://pythagoras.org.za/index.php/pythagoras/article/view/261
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