Students’ understanding of geometry terminology through the lens of Van Hiele theory

After a long six-year lapse, the Curriculum and Assessment Policy Statement introduced in 2012 included geometry as part of the South African Grade 12 Mathematics Paper 2. The first cohort of matriculation students wrote Paper 2 in 2014. This article reports on the understanding of geometry terminol...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jogymol Alex, Kuttickattu J. Mammen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2018-10-01
Series:Pythagoras
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pythagoras.org.za/index.php/pythagoras/article/view/376
id doaj-3e090d01f98c457c8e1589453b75a1a3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3e090d01f98c457c8e1589453b75a1a32020-11-25T02:52:25ZengAOSISPythagoras1012-23462223-78952018-10-01391e1e810.4102/pythagoras.v39i1.376207Students’ understanding of geometry terminology through the lens of Van Hiele theoryJogymol Alex0Kuttickattu J. Mammen1Faculty of Educational Sciences, Walter Sisulu UniversityFaculty of Education, University of Fort HareAfter a long six-year lapse, the Curriculum and Assessment Policy Statement introduced in 2012 included geometry as part of the South African Grade 12 Mathematics Paper 2. The first cohort of matriculation students wrote Paper 2 in 2014. This article reports on the understanding of geometry terminology with which a group of 154 first-year mathematics education students entered a rural South African university in 2015; 126 volunteered to be part of the study. Responses to a 60-item multiple-choice questionnaire (30 verbally presented and 30 visually presented items) in geometry terminology provided the data for the study. A concept’s verbal description should be associated with its correct visual image. Van Hiele theory provided the lens for the study. An overall percentage mean score of 64% obtained in the test indicated that the majority of the students had a fairly good knowledge of basic geometry terminology. The students obtained a percentage mean score of 68% on visually presented items against that of 59% on verbally presented items implying a lower level thinking as per Van Hiele theory. The findings of this study imply a combination approach using visual and verbal representations to enhance conceptual understanding in geometry. This has to be complemented and supplemented through scaffolding to fill student teachers’ content gap.https://pythagoras.org.za/index.php/pythagoras/article/view/376Geometryvisual and verbal terminology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jogymol Alex
Kuttickattu J. Mammen
spellingShingle Jogymol Alex
Kuttickattu J. Mammen
Students’ understanding of geometry terminology through the lens of Van Hiele theory
Pythagoras
Geometry
visual and verbal terminology
author_facet Jogymol Alex
Kuttickattu J. Mammen
author_sort Jogymol Alex
title Students’ understanding of geometry terminology through the lens of Van Hiele theory
title_short Students’ understanding of geometry terminology through the lens of Van Hiele theory
title_full Students’ understanding of geometry terminology through the lens of Van Hiele theory
title_fullStr Students’ understanding of geometry terminology through the lens of Van Hiele theory
title_full_unstemmed Students’ understanding of geometry terminology through the lens of Van Hiele theory
title_sort students’ understanding of geometry terminology through the lens of van hiele theory
publisher AOSIS
series Pythagoras
issn 1012-2346
2223-7895
publishDate 2018-10-01
description After a long six-year lapse, the Curriculum and Assessment Policy Statement introduced in 2012 included geometry as part of the South African Grade 12 Mathematics Paper 2. The first cohort of matriculation students wrote Paper 2 in 2014. This article reports on the understanding of geometry terminology with which a group of 154 first-year mathematics education students entered a rural South African university in 2015; 126 volunteered to be part of the study. Responses to a 60-item multiple-choice questionnaire (30 verbally presented and 30 visually presented items) in geometry terminology provided the data for the study. A concept’s verbal description should be associated with its correct visual image. Van Hiele theory provided the lens for the study. An overall percentage mean score of 64% obtained in the test indicated that the majority of the students had a fairly good knowledge of basic geometry terminology. The students obtained a percentage mean score of 68% on visually presented items against that of 59% on verbally presented items implying a lower level thinking as per Van Hiele theory. The findings of this study imply a combination approach using visual and verbal representations to enhance conceptual understanding in geometry. This has to be complemented and supplemented through scaffolding to fill student teachers’ content gap.
topic Geometry
visual and verbal terminology
url https://pythagoras.org.za/index.php/pythagoras/article/view/376
work_keys_str_mv AT jogymolalex studentsunderstandingofgeometryterminologythroughthelensofvanhieletheory
AT kuttickattujmammen studentsunderstandingofgeometryterminologythroughthelensofvanhieletheory
_version_ 1724730224549036032