A Van Hiele Theory analysis for teaching volume of three-dimensional geometric shapes

Geometry is among the cornerstones of mathematics because of its applicability in real life and its connection to other areas of mathematics. The reported study explored how the volume of 3D geometric shapes was taught in one high school in Lesotho. One male teacher and an intact class of sixty high...

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Main Authors: Moru, Eunice Kolitsoe, Malebanye, Maqoni, Morobe, Nomusic, George, Mosotho Joseph
Format: UMS Journal (OJS)
Language:eng
Published: Universitas Muhammadiyah Surakarta 2020
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Online Access:https://journals.ums.ac.id/index.php/jramathedu/article/view/11744
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author Moru, Eunice Kolitsoe
Malebanye, Maqoni
Morobe, Nomusic
George, Mosotho Joseph
author_facet Moru, Eunice Kolitsoe
Malebanye, Maqoni
Morobe, Nomusic
George, Mosotho Joseph
author_sort Moru, Eunice Kolitsoe
collection OJS
description Geometry is among the cornerstones of mathematics because of its applicability in real life and its connection to other areas of mathematics. The reported study explored how the volume of 3D geometric shapes was taught in one high school in Lesotho. One male teacher and an intact class of sixty high school students were the participants of the study. The study was exploratory in nature. This was in order to understand the phenomenon under study so as to suggest ways on how to make some improvements for the future. Data were collected through classroom observations, photo shootings, note-taking, and interviews. Classroom observations enabled the researchers to start the analysis while also observing. The photos taken captured the nature of the tasks given to students, some explanations, and class interactions. The Van Hiele theory of geometric thought was used as the framework of analysis. The findings of the study show that at level 1, the teacher focused mainly on the vocabulary of the concept at hand, the information phase. Another phase which was dominant in the teaching at the same level is the direct orientation. The free-orientation phase was not fully realized. The analysis level was achieved through the information phase and the direct orientation phase. Thus the progression from one level to another by students occurred having some phases of learning being skipped due to the way the instruction was organized. It is postulated that lack of proper understanding of some concepts in geometry by students may result from this kind of instruction.
format UMS Journal (OJS)
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publisher Universitas Muhammadiyah Surakarta
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spelling oai:ojs2.journals.ums.ac.id:article-11744 A Van Hiele Theory analysis for teaching volume of three-dimensional geometric shapes Moru, Eunice Kolitsoe Malebanye, Maqoni Morobe, Nomusic George, Mosotho Joseph Mathematics Education Geometry, 2-dimensional shapes, 3-dimensional shapes, Van Hiele Theory Geometry is among the cornerstones of mathematics because of its applicability in real life and its connection to other areas of mathematics. The reported study explored how the volume of 3D geometric shapes was taught in one high school in Lesotho. One male teacher and an intact class of sixty high school students were the participants of the study. The study was exploratory in nature. This was in order to understand the phenomenon under study so as to suggest ways on how to make some improvements for the future. Data were collected through classroom observations, photo shootings, note-taking, and interviews. Classroom observations enabled the researchers to start the analysis while also observing. The photos taken captured the nature of the tasks given to students, some explanations, and class interactions. The Van Hiele theory of geometric thought was used as the framework of analysis. The findings of the study show that at level 1, the teacher focused mainly on the vocabulary of the concept at hand, the information phase. Another phase which was dominant in the teaching at the same level is the direct orientation. The free-orientation phase was not fully realized. The analysis level was achieved through the information phase and the direct orientation phase. Thus the progression from one level to another by students occurred having some phases of learning being skipped due to the way the instruction was organized. It is postulated that lack of proper understanding of some concepts in geometry by students may result from this kind of instruction. Universitas Muhammadiyah Surakarta 2020-12-16 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion application/pdf https://journals.ums.ac.id/index.php/jramathedu/article/view/11744 10.23917/jramathedu.v6i1.11744 JRAMathEdu (Journal of Research and Advances in Mathematics Education); Volume 6 Issue 1 January 2021; 17-31 2541-2590 2503-3697 10.23917/jramathedu.v6i1 eng https://journals.ums.ac.id/index.php/jramathedu/article/view/11744/6169 Copyright (c) 2020 Mosotho Joseph George, Kolitsoe Eunice Moru http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
spellingShingle Mathematics Education
Geometry, 2-dimensional shapes, 3-dimensional shapes, Van Hiele Theory
Moru, Eunice Kolitsoe
Malebanye, Maqoni
Morobe, Nomusic
George, Mosotho Joseph
A Van Hiele Theory analysis for teaching volume of three-dimensional geometric shapes
title A Van Hiele Theory analysis for teaching volume of three-dimensional geometric shapes
title_full A Van Hiele Theory analysis for teaching volume of three-dimensional geometric shapes
title_fullStr A Van Hiele Theory analysis for teaching volume of three-dimensional geometric shapes
title_full_unstemmed A Van Hiele Theory analysis for teaching volume of three-dimensional geometric shapes
title_short A Van Hiele Theory analysis for teaching volume of three-dimensional geometric shapes
title_sort van hiele theory analysis for teaching volume of three dimensional geometric shapes
topic Mathematics Education
Geometry, 2-dimensional shapes, 3-dimensional shapes, Van Hiele Theory
topic_facet Mathematics Education
Geometry, 2-dimensional shapes, 3-dimensional shapes, Van Hiele Theory
url https://journals.ums.ac.id/index.php/jramathedu/article/view/11744
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