Description
This thesis attempts to answer the question ‘What changes in understanding occur as a student develops their way of understanding similarity using geometric transformations and what teacher interventions contribute to these changes in understanding?’ Similarity is a topic taught in school geometry usually alongside the related topic Congruence. The Common Core State Standards for Mathematics, upon which many states have based their state level educational standards, recommend teachers leverage transformational geometry to explain congruence and similarity using geometric transformations. "However, there is a lack of research studies regarding how transformational geometry can be taught as a productive way of understanding similarities and what challenges students might encounter when learning similarities via transformational geometry approaches." This study aims to further the efforts of teachers who are trying to develop their students’ transformational understandings of similarity.
This study was conducted as exploratory teaching interviews in Spring 2023 at a large public university. The student was an undergraduate student who had not previously taken a transformational geometry-based Euclidean geometry at the university. I, as a teacher-researcher, designed a set of tasks for the exploratory teaching interviews, and implemented them over the course of 5 weeks. I, as a researcher, also analyzed the data to create a model for the student's understanding of similarity. Specifically, I was interested in sorting the ways of understanding expressed by the student into the categories pictorial, measurement-based, and transformational. By analyzing the videos from the interviews and tracking the students’ understandings from moment to moment, I was able to see a shift in her understanding toward a transformational understanding. Thus her way of understanding similarity using geometric transformations was strengthened and I was able to pinpoint key shifts in understanding that contribute to the strengthening of this understanding.
Notably, the student developed a notion of dilation as coming from a single centerpoint, negotiated definitions from each way of understanding until eventually settling on a definition rooted in transformations, and applied similarity to an unfamiliar context using both her intuition about similarity and the definition she created. The implications of this being that a somewhat advanced understanding dilation is productive for understanding similarity using geometric transformations, and that to develop a student's way of understanding similarity using geometric transformations there must be a practical need for this created by tasks the student engages with.
Details
Title
- Students’ Understanding of Mathematical Similarity Using Geometric Transformations
Contributors
- Combs, Nicole (Author)
- Roh, Kyeong Hah (Thesis director)
- Zandieh, Michelle (Committee member)
- Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
- School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences (Contributor)
- School of International Letters and Cultures (Contributor)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2023-12
Resource Type
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