The spiral curriculum, integrated teaching and structured learning of mathematics at the secondary level

The investigator's experience of teaching mathematics at a college of education since 1983 has reinforced his conviction that trainee students come to college with significant gaps, weaknesses and faults in their (mathematical) conceptual structures, probably as a result of shortcomings in the...

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Main Author: Alummoottil, Joseph Michael
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Rhodes University 1990
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003654
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-17692018-09-04T04:17:09ZThe spiral curriculum, integrated teaching and structured learning of mathematics at the secondary levelAlummoottil, Joseph MichaelMathematics -- Study and teaching (Secondary) -- South AfricaLearning -- Mathematical models -- ResearchThe investigator's experience of teaching mathematics at a college of education since 1983 has reinforced his conviction that trainee students come to college with significant gaps, weaknesses and faults in their (mathematical) conceptual structures, probably as a result of shortcomings in the mathematics teaching to which they have been exposed. The theme of this investigation is thus a natural choice that appeared to be of immediate relevance to secondary school mathematics teaching. The analysis of the issue leads to a unified perspective: the problem is placed in a theoretical framework where Bruner [spiral curriculum], Ausubel [structured learning] and Skemp [relational understanding] are brought together. How the curriculum, textbooks and examination influence school mathematics teaching is examined in some depth and the consequences investigated. Two specific topics, viz. the generalised Pythagorean relation and absolute value are investigated in relation to published work, curriculum and textbooks, and each (topic) is presented as a unifying theme in secondary mathematics to standard 9 pupils. The classroom exercise is assessed to test the hypothesis that structured, integrated presentation around a spiral curriculum promotes "relational understanding". Analysis of results supports the hypothesis.Rhodes UniversityFaculty of Education, Education1990ThesisMastersMEd153 leavespdfvital:1769http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003654EnglishAlummoottil, Joseph Michael
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Mathematics -- Study and teaching (Secondary) -- South Africa
Learning -- Mathematical models -- Research
spellingShingle Mathematics -- Study and teaching (Secondary) -- South Africa
Learning -- Mathematical models -- Research
Alummoottil, Joseph Michael
The spiral curriculum, integrated teaching and structured learning of mathematics at the secondary level
description The investigator's experience of teaching mathematics at a college of education since 1983 has reinforced his conviction that trainee students come to college with significant gaps, weaknesses and faults in their (mathematical) conceptual structures, probably as a result of shortcomings in the mathematics teaching to which they have been exposed. The theme of this investigation is thus a natural choice that appeared to be of immediate relevance to secondary school mathematics teaching. The analysis of the issue leads to a unified perspective: the problem is placed in a theoretical framework where Bruner [spiral curriculum], Ausubel [structured learning] and Skemp [relational understanding] are brought together. How the curriculum, textbooks and examination influence school mathematics teaching is examined in some depth and the consequences investigated. Two specific topics, viz. the generalised Pythagorean relation and absolute value are investigated in relation to published work, curriculum and textbooks, and each (topic) is presented as a unifying theme in secondary mathematics to standard 9 pupils. The classroom exercise is assessed to test the hypothesis that structured, integrated presentation around a spiral curriculum promotes "relational understanding". Analysis of results supports the hypothesis.
author Alummoottil, Joseph Michael
author_facet Alummoottil, Joseph Michael
author_sort Alummoottil, Joseph Michael
title The spiral curriculum, integrated teaching and structured learning of mathematics at the secondary level
title_short The spiral curriculum, integrated teaching and structured learning of mathematics at the secondary level
title_full The spiral curriculum, integrated teaching and structured learning of mathematics at the secondary level
title_fullStr The spiral curriculum, integrated teaching and structured learning of mathematics at the secondary level
title_full_unstemmed The spiral curriculum, integrated teaching and structured learning of mathematics at the secondary level
title_sort spiral curriculum, integrated teaching and structured learning of mathematics at the secondary level
publisher Rhodes University
publishDate 1990
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003654
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AT alummoottiljosephmichael spiralcurriculumintegratedteachingandstructuredlearningofmathematicsatthesecondarylevel
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