• Title of article

    The more it changes, the more it becomes the same: The development of the routine of shape identification in dynamic geometry environment

  • Author/Authors

    Sinclair، نويسنده , , Nathalie and Moss، نويسنده , , Joan، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    17
  • From page
    28
  • To page
    44
  • Abstract
    The overall aim of our research project is to explore the impact of dynamic geometry environments (DGEs) on childrenʹs geometrical thinking. The point of departure for the study presented in this paper is the analytically and empirically grounded assumption that as the geometric discourse develops, the direct visual identification of geometric shapes gives way to discursively mediated identification, that is to a process in which one needs to perform a discursive procedure, prescribed by a formal definition of the shape, in order to ascertain the name of the shape. Previous research, conducted in static geometry environments, has already shown that many children, even in the middle school grades, rely on static, visual prototypes when identifying geometric shapes and that formal definitions, even if known, play no role in this process. Our study aimed at testing the conjecture that DGEs, in which the shapes can be continuously transformed, may flex the routine of identification, allowing for greater diversity in the shapes recognized as deserving a given name (e.g. triangle). This, we believed, would be an important step toward the discursively mediated routine of identification. The study, conducted among 4–5 year-old children working with Sketchpad, furnished some supporting evidence. In this paper, the focus is on one 30-min lesson during which the children observed, described, created and transformed triangles of different sizes, proportions, and orientations. During this one meeting the childrenʹs thinking evolved, in that the diversity of three-sided polygons they were prepared to call ‘triangle’ grew substantially. Not surprisingly, however, this rapidly-induced change was local and object-level rather than meta-level: it changed the childrenʹs use of a specific word rather than causing a transition to a discourse-mediated routine of identification.
  • Keywords
    Geometry , Dynamic geometry environments , Discourse , Primary school
  • Journal title
    International Journal of Educational Research
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    International Journal of Educational Research
  • Record number

    1403286