|
|
Introduction
Recently in a Mathematical Digest (Jul '96,
no. 104:26) published by the Mathematics Department at
UCT someone wrote the following:
"... South Africa is the habitat of an
endangered species, for Euclidean Geometry has
disappeared from the syllabuses of most other countries
... "
Such a statement is rather common amongst mathematicians
and mathematics educators in South Africa, but speaks of
great ignorance, as nothing could be further from the truth.
In fact, geometry is alive and well and experiencing an
exciting rebirth in many countries; not only at school
level, but at university level as well. There is great
danger if policy makers in mathematics education in South
Africa are unaware of these dramatic new developments.
Some
developments in contemporary
geometry
Some
developments in geometry
education
|

|
The Van
Hiele theory
Russian research on geometry
The primary & middle school geometry
curriculum
|
|

|
Process
versus product teaching in geometry
The USEME experiment
|
|

|
Dynamic
Geometry Software
|
Concluding
comments
So what are some of the crucial changes necessary in
secondary school geometry as we approach the year 2000?
Basically the changes can be summed up as changes in
content, process and teacher education. In terms of content
there is a need to contemporize by including possible
content such as fractals, graph theory, transformations,
non-Euclidean geometry, etc. at various grades and at
various levels of formality. In particular, the study of
transformations could form a valuable golden thread through
the entire curriculum, and in the high school show the
powerful integration of algebra and geometry (see De
Villiers, 1993). However, even before any changes in the
high school, many changes are necessary to our primary
school geometry curriculum. Apart from content such as
tessellations, vision- and 3D-geometry as described by Van
Niekerk (1995, 1996) and Witterholt & Heinneman (1995)
is absolutely essential for developing visualisation and
spatial orientation skills, not only for formal geometry
later on, but also for further study in woodwork, metalwork,
architecture, art, computer graphics, engineering design,
etc. More use could also be made of accurate scale drawings
to solve complicated real world problems, and to develop an
intuitive understanding of the process of modelling. These
changes also have to be contextualised meaningfully in
different contexts geographically, culturally,
linguistically, etc.
However, perhaps even more important than
changes in geometrical content, we need to focus far more on
teaching and developing the process aspects of mathematics.
It needs to be acknowledged that geometry content should not
be presented in a ready-made form to pupils, but that they
should actively (re)construct it in the class. In order to
realize such a radical change in objectives, it is also
necessary to change our evaluation procedures. Joubert
(1980) and De Vries (1980) have for example developed
several examples of how one could evaluate pupils' abilities
to conjecture, define, axiomatize, classify, read
critically, refute, etc. (For example see Joubert, 1988
& 1989).
Lastly, it is important to point out that
none of the above would be realizable unless radical changes
are made to teacher education programs around the country;
both in pre-service and in-service. In particular, most high
school teachers, even those with good qualifications, know
hardly any more geometry than the pupils they have to teach.
The reason is simple: most tertiary institutions (with the
exception of UPE) do not teach any further geometry in their
undergraduate courses. It is therefore important to
seriously consider the (re)introduction of geometry in
tertiary courses for secondary teachers, not only Euclidean,
but different kinds of geometry (compare with Baart, 1992).
However, the geometry education of primary school teachers
also needs urgent attention. Burger (1992) for example has
proposed an interesting geometry curriculum for primary
mathematics teachers based on the Van Hiele model that could
provide the basis for the development of a new college
geometry curriculum.
References
|