An investigation of the influence of visualisation, exploring patterns and generalisation on thinking levels in the formation of the concepts of sequences and series

Piaget and Freudenthal advocated thinking levels. In the 1950's the van Hieles developed a five level model of geometric thought. Judith Land adapted the model in 1990, utilising four levels to teach the concept of functions. These four levels have been considered here in the formation of c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nixon, Edith Glenda
Other Authors: Wessels, Dirk Cornelis Johannes
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:Nixon, Edith Glenda (2002) An investigation of the influence of visualisation, exploring patterns and generalisation on thinking levels in the formation of the concepts of sequences and series, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/15651>
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/15651
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-uir.unisa.ac.za-10500-156512021-04-29T05:09:14Z An investigation of the influence of visualisation, exploring patterns and generalisation on thinking levels in the formation of the concepts of sequences and series Nixon, Edith Glenda Wessels, Dirk Cornelis Johannes Naude, C. G. 515.24 Sequences (Mathematics) Mathematics -- Study and teaching Piaget and Freudenthal advocated thinking levels. In the 1950's the van Hieles developed a five level model of geometric thought. Judith Land adapted the model in 1990, utilising four levels to teach the concept of functions. These four levels have been considered here in the formation of concepts of sequences and series. The origin and relevance of sequences and series have been studied and the importance of visualisation, patterning and generalisation in the instructional process investigated. A series of lessons on these topics was taught to a group of six higher grade matriculation students of mixed ability and gender. Questionnaires related to student progress through the various levels were answered, categorised, graphed and analysed. Despite the small number of students, results seem to indicate that emphasising visualisation, exploring patterns and generalisation and teaching the topics as a reinvention had made a positive contribution towards progress through the various thought levels. Mathematics Education M.A. (Mathematics Education) 2015-01-23T04:24:00Z 2015-01-23T04:24:00Z 2002-11 Dissertation Nixon, Edith Glenda (2002) An investigation of the influence of visualisation, exploring patterns and generalisation on thinking levels in the formation of the concepts of sequences and series, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/15651> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/15651 en 1 online resource (xi, 172 leaves) application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic 515.24
Sequences (Mathematics)
Mathematics -- Study and teaching
spellingShingle 515.24
Sequences (Mathematics)
Mathematics -- Study and teaching
Nixon, Edith Glenda
An investigation of the influence of visualisation, exploring patterns and generalisation on thinking levels in the formation of the concepts of sequences and series
description Piaget and Freudenthal advocated thinking levels. In the 1950's the van Hieles developed a five level model of geometric thought. Judith Land adapted the model in 1990, utilising four levels to teach the concept of functions. These four levels have been considered here in the formation of concepts of sequences and series. The origin and relevance of sequences and series have been studied and the importance of visualisation, patterning and generalisation in the instructional process investigated. A series of lessons on these topics was taught to a group of six higher grade matriculation students of mixed ability and gender. Questionnaires related to student progress through the various levels were answered, categorised, graphed and analysed. Despite the small number of students, results seem to indicate that emphasising visualisation, exploring patterns and generalisation and teaching the topics as a reinvention had made a positive contribution towards progress through the various thought levels. === Mathematics Education === M.A. (Mathematics Education)
author2 Wessels, Dirk Cornelis Johannes
author_facet Wessels, Dirk Cornelis Johannes
Nixon, Edith Glenda
author Nixon, Edith Glenda
author_sort Nixon, Edith Glenda
title An investigation of the influence of visualisation, exploring patterns and generalisation on thinking levels in the formation of the concepts of sequences and series
title_short An investigation of the influence of visualisation, exploring patterns and generalisation on thinking levels in the formation of the concepts of sequences and series
title_full An investigation of the influence of visualisation, exploring patterns and generalisation on thinking levels in the formation of the concepts of sequences and series
title_fullStr An investigation of the influence of visualisation, exploring patterns and generalisation on thinking levels in the formation of the concepts of sequences and series
title_full_unstemmed An investigation of the influence of visualisation, exploring patterns and generalisation on thinking levels in the formation of the concepts of sequences and series
title_sort investigation of the influence of visualisation, exploring patterns and generalisation on thinking levels in the formation of the concepts of sequences and series
publishDate 2015
url Nixon, Edith Glenda (2002) An investigation of the influence of visualisation, exploring patterns and generalisation on thinking levels in the formation of the concepts of sequences and series, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/15651>
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/15651
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