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Developing geometrical reasoning in the secondary school: outcomes of trialling teaching activities in classrooms, a report to the QCA

机译:在中学开展几何推理:在课堂上试验教学活动的结果,向QCa提交报告

摘要

This report presents the findings of the Southampton/Hampshire Group of mathematicians and mathematics educators sponsored by the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) to develop and trial some teaching/learning materials for use in schools that focus on the development of geometrical reasoning at the secondary school level. The project ran from October 2002 to November 2003. An interim report was presented to the QCA in March 2003. 1. The Southampton/Hampshire Group consisted of five University mathematicians and mathematics educators, a local authority inspector, and five secondary school teachers of mathematics. The remit of the group was to develop and report on teaching ideas that focus on the development of geometrical reasoning at the secondary school level. 2. In reviewing the existing geometry curriculum, the group endorsed the RS/ JMC working group conclusion (RS/ JMC geometry report, 2001) that the current mathematics curriculum for England contains sufficient scope for the development of geometrical reasoning, but that it would benefit from some clarification in respect of this aspect of geometry education. Such clarification would be especially helpful in resolving the very odd separation, in the programme of study for mathematics, of ‘geometrical reasoning’ from ‘transformations and co-ordinates’, as if transformations, for example, cannot be used in geometrical reasoning. 3. The group formulated a rationale for designing and developing suitable teaching materials that support the teaching and learning of geometrical reasoning. The group suggests the following as guiding principles: • Geometrical situations selected for use in the classroom should, as far as possible, be chosen to be useful, interesting and/or surprising to pupils; • Activities should expect pupils to explain, justify or reason and provide opportunities for pupils to be critical of their own, and their peers’, explanations; • Activities should provide opportunities for pupils to develop problem solving skills and to engage in problem posing; • The forms of reasoning expected should be examples of local deduction, where pupils can utilise any geometrical properties that they know to deduce or explain other facts or results. • To build on pupils’ prior experience, activities should involve the properties of 2D and 3D shapes, aspects of position and direction, and the use of transformation-based arguments that are about the geometrical situation being studied (rather than being about transformations per se); • The generating of data or the use of measurements, while playing important parts in mathematics, and sometimes assisting with the building of conjectures, should not be an end point to pupils’ mathematical activity. Indeed, where sensible, in order to build geometric reasoning and discourage over-reliance on empirical verification, many classroom activities might use contexts where measurements or other forms of data are not generated. 4. In designing and trialling suitable classroom material, the group found that the issue of how much structure to provide in a task is an important factor in maximising the opportunity for geometrical reasoning to take place. The group also found that the role of the teacher is vital in helping pupils to progress beyond straightforward descriptions of geometrical observations to encompass the reasoning that justifies those observations. Teacher knowledge in the area of geometry is therefore important. 5. The group found that pupils benefit from working collaboratively in groups with the kind of discussion and argumentation that has to be used to articulate their geometrical reasoning. This form of organisation creates both the need and the forum for argumentation that can lead to mathematical explanation. Such development to mathematical explanation, and the forms for collaborative working that support it, do not, however, necessarily occur spontaneously. Such things need careful planning and teaching. 6. Whilst pupils can demonstrate their reasoning ability orally, either as part of group discussion or through presentation of group work to a class, the transition to individual recording of reasoned argument causes significant problems. Several methods have been used successfully in this project to support this transition, including 'fact cards' and 'writing frames', but more research is needed into ways of helping written communication of geometrical reasoning to develop. 7. It was found possible in this study to enable pupils from all ages and attainments within the lower secondary (Key Stage 3) curriculum to participate in mathematical reasoning, given appropriate tasks, teaching and classroom culture. Given the finding of the project that many pupils know more about geometrical reasoning than they can demonstrate in writing, the emphasis in assessment on individual written response does not capture the reasoning skills which pupils are able to develop and exercise. Sufficient time is needed for pupils to engage in reasoning through a variety of activities; skills of reasoning and communication are unlikely to be absorbed quickly by many students. 8. The study suggests that it is appropriate for all teachers to aim to develop the geometrical reasoning of all pupils, but equally that this is a non-trivial task. Obstacles that need to be overcome are likely to include uncertainty about the nature of mathematical reasoning and about what is expected to be taught in this area among many teachers, lack of exemplars of good practice (although we have tried to address this by lesson descriptions in this report), especially in using transformational arguments, lack of time and freedom in the curriculum to properly develop work in this area, an assessment system which does not recognise students’ oral powers of reasoning, and a lack of appreciation of the value of geometry as a vehicle for broadening the curriculum for high attainers, as well as developing reasoning and communication skills for all students. 9. Areas for further work include future work in the area of geometrical reasoning, include the need for longitudinal studies of how geometrical reasoning develops through time given a sustained programme of activities (in this project we were conscious that the timescale on which we were working only enabled us to present 'snapshots'), studies and evaluation of published materials on geometrical reasoning, a study of 'critical experiences' which influence the development of geometrical reasoning, an analysis of the characteristics of successful and unsuccessful tasks for geometrical reasoning, a study of the transition from verbal reasoning to written reasoning, how overall perceptions of geometrical figures ('gestalt') develops as a component of geometrical reasoning (including how to create the links which facilitate this), and the use of dynamic geometry software in any (or all) of the above.10. As this group was one of six which could form a model for part of the work of regional centres set up like the IREMs in France, it seems worth recording that the constitution of the group worked very well, especially after members had got to know each other by working in smaller groups on specific topics. The balance of differing expertise was right, and we all felt that we learned a great deal from other group members during the experience. Overall, being involved in this type of research and development project was a powerful form of professional development for all those concerned. In retrospect, the group could have benefited from some longer full-day meetings to jointly develop ideas and analyse the resulting classroom material and experience rather than the pattern of after-school meetings that did not always allow sufficient time to do full justice to the complexity of many of the issues the group was tackling.
机译:本报告介绍了由资格和课程管理局(QCA)赞助的南安普敦/汉普郡数学家和数学教育者小组的研究结果,目的是开发和试用一些用于学校的教学材料,这些材料侧重于中学阶段几何推理的发展。学校级别。该项目于2002年10月至2003年11月进行。2003年3月向QCA提交了一份中期报告。1.南安普敦/汉普郡小组由五名大学数学家和数学教育者,一名地方当局督察以及五名中学数学教师组成。该小组的职责是开发和报告注重中学阶段几何推理发展的教学思想。 2.在审查现有的几何课程时,研究小组认可了RS / JMC工作组的结论(RS / JMC几何报告,2001年),即英国当前的数学课程为几何推理的发展提供了足够的空间,但它将受益从有关几何教育这一方面的一些澄清。这种澄清对于解决数学学习计划中“几何推理”与“变换和坐标”之间的奇异分离特别有用,例如,似乎不能在几何推理中使用变换。 3.该小组制定了设计和开发合适的教材以支持几何推理教学的基本原理。该小组提出以下指导原则:•应尽可能选择在教室中使用的几何情况,以使其对学生有用,有趣和/或令人惊讶。 •活动应期望学生进行解释,辩解或推理,并为学生提供批评自己和同伴的解释的机会; •活动应为学生提供发展解决问题的能力和参与提出问题的机会; •预期的推理形式应该是局部演绎的示例,在这种情况下,学生可以利用他们知道的任何几何特性来演绎或解释其他事实或结果。 •要以学生的先前经验为基础,活动应涉及2D和3D形状的属性,位置和方向的方面,以及使用与正在研究的几何情况有关的基于变换的论证(而不是关于变换本身) ); •在数学中扮演重要角色,有时甚至有助于建立猜想的同时,数据的生成或测量的使用不应成为学生数学活动的终点。确实,在合理的情况下,为了建立几何推理并阻止对实证检验的过度依赖,许多课堂活动可能会使用未生成测量或其他形式的数据的环境。 4.在设计和试用合适的教室材料时,小组发现在任务中提供多少结构的问题是最大程度地进行几何推理的机会的重要因素。该小组还发现,教师的作用对于帮助学生超越对几何观测的简单描述以涵盖证明这些观测合理的理由至关重要。因此,教师在几何学领域的知识很重要。 5.小组发现,通过小组讨论来进行辩论,可以使学生受益,小组讨论必须用这种方式来阐明他们的几何推理。这种组织形式既产生了辩论的需求,又引发了论证,从而导致了数学上的解释。然而,这种对数学解释的发展以及支持它的协作工作形式不一定是自发发生的。这些事情需要仔细的计划和教导。 6.虽然学生可以通过小组讨论或通过向小组介绍小组工作来口头证明他们的推理能力,但过渡到个人记录有理据的论点会造成严重的问题。在该项目中已成功使用了多种方法来支持这种过渡,包括“事实卡片”和“书写框架”,但是需要更多的研究来帮助开发几何推理的书面交流方式。 7.在这项研究中发现,有可能使各个年龄段和学历的学生在初中(关键阶段3)课程中参加数学推理,并提供适当的任务,教学和课堂文化。鉴于该项目的发现,许多学生对几何推理的了解超出了他们书面所能证明的范围,对个人书面回答的评估重点并未抓住学生能够发展和锻炼的推理能力。学生需要足够的时间通过各种活动进行推理;许多学生不太可能很快地掌握推理和沟通技巧。 8.研究表明,所有教师都应着眼于所有学生的几何推理,但这同样是一项艰巨的任务。需要克服的障碍可能包括不确定数学推理的性质以及许多教师希望在该领域教什么的不确定性,缺乏良好实践的榜样(尽管我们已尝试通过以下课程的描述来解决这一问题)这份报告),尤其是在使用转化论证,课程中缺乏时间和自由以正确开展该领域的工作,评估系统无法识别学生的口头推理能力以及对几何价值缺乏认识的情况下作为拓宽高成就者课程的工具,并为所有学生发展推理和沟通技巧。 9.进一步的工作领域包括几何推理领域的未来工作,包括在给定持续性活动计划的情况下对几何推理如何随着时间发展进行纵向研究的需要(在该项目中,我们意识到我们所工作的时间范围仅使我们能够介绍“快照”),对几何推理的已出版材料进行研究和评估,对影响几何推理发展的“批判性经验”进行研究,对几何推理成功和不成功任务的特征进行分析,研究从口头推理到书面推理的转变,如何将几何图形的整体感知(“格式塔”)发展为几何推理的组成部分(包括如何创建有助于实现此目的的链接),以及在任何形式中使用动态几何软件(或以上)10。由于该小组是可以作为法国IREM成立的区域中心工作的一部分的六个小组之一,因此似乎值得记录的是,该小组的组成非常好,尤其是在成员了解了每个小组之后其他则是通过小组讨论特定主题来实现。不同专业知识之间的平衡是正确的,我们都觉得在这次经历中我们从其他小组成员那里学到了很多东西。总体而言,参与此类研发项目对所有相关人员而言都是一种强有力的专业发展形式。回想起来,该小组本可以从更长的全天会议中受益,共同制定想法并分析由此产生的课堂材料和经验,而不是课余会议的模式,因为课后会议并不总是有足够的时间来充分说明复杂性。该小组正在处理的许多问题中。

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