Proceedings of the Twenty-Sixth ICMI Study: Advances in Geometry Education (2024)

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Justifying Geometrical Generalizations in Elementary School Preservice Teacher Education

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João Ponte

This article is part of a teacher education experience implemented in Portugal with future teachers and educators of the 2nd year of a basic education degree, in which they have produced evidence of justifications of generalizations in a context of exploratory teaching. The study aims to understand how they justify generalizations about families of geometric figures. Data were collected by audio and video records and from the participants' written productions, focusing on arguments used to justify generalizations about families of figures. In the analysis, special attention was given to the kind of arguments, its generality degree, the difficulties expressed and the aspects that have promoted the learning of this process. The results show that the participants had some difficulties in building justifications, in part by the lack of understanding about the justification nature. Initially, they expressed difficulties with the study object (a family of figures instead of a unique f...

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Olivera J . Đokić

Since one of the main goals of teaching geometry is to provide students with the opportunity to develop spatial reasoning, it is important to find the most suitable support for learning 3D geometry in elementary school. This paper compares Information and Communication Technology (ICT) and physical manipulatives support, with the aim to answer if their use produces different effects on students’ spatial reasoning. The participants in the study were 74 4th graders (10–11 years old) who were assigned to two equal groups that attended a month of the experimental program. Group E-ICT learned with the ICT support and group E-MAN learned with physical manipulatives support. The results showed that there was no difference in students’ 3D geometry achievement regardless of the support that was used, and that both supports provided learning access for all students. According to our results, teaching geometry should be directed to the complementary use of physical manipulatives and ICT support, depending on the technological and software resources available to schools and teachers’ preference of the support. ICT can assist in achieving learning equity, but there is a need for a systematic development of the ICT sources that could be used as instructional manipulatives, their promotion, and the support for the teachers. Keywords manipulative, geometry, equity, spatial reasoning, elementary mathematics instruction

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Proceedings of the ICMI Study 19 …

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Nitsa Movshovitz-Hadar

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Michela Maschietto

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Proceedings of the Twenty-Sixth ICMI Study: Advances in Geometry Education (2024)

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