Skip to product information
1 of 1

The History of the Geometry Curriculum in the United States

Regular price $48.00
Regular price $48.00 Sale price $48.00
Sold out
This volume explores the evolution of the U.S. geometry curriculum over 150 years, using textbooks and policy documents to trace changes. It highlights notable events, themes like proof and visuali...
Read More
  • 29 January 2008
View Product Details

This volume investigates the evolution of the geometry curriculum in the United States over the past 150 years. A primary goal is to increase awareness of the shape and nature of the current geometry curriculum by explaining how things have come to be as they are.

Given the limited access to first-hand accounts of the enacted geometry curriculum during the past 150 years, the monograph relies on textbooks to provide a record of the implemented curriculum at any given point in time. Policy documents can provide insight into the choices made in textbooks by hinting at the issues considered and the recommendations made.

The monograph is organized in a chronological sequence of "notable events" leading to discernable changes in thinking about the geometry curriculum over the past century and a half—roughly the extent of time during which geometry has been taught in American schools. Notable events include important reports or commissions, influential texts, new schools of thought, and developments in learning technologies. These events affected, among other things: content and aims of the geometry curriculum; the nature of mathematical activity as construed by both mathematicians and mathematics educators; and, the resources students are given for engaging in mathematical activity. Before embarking through the notable events, it is necessary to consider the "big bang" of geometry, namely the moment in time that shaped the future life of the geometry curriculum. This corresponds to the emergence of Euclidean geometry. Given its influence on the shape of the geometry curriculum, familiarity with the nature of the geometry articulated in Euclid’s Elements is essential to understanding the many tensions that surround the school geometry curriculum.

Several themes emerge over the course of the monograph, and include: the aims and means of the geometry curriculum, the importance of proof in geometry, the role of visualization and tactile experiences, the fusion between solid and plane geometry, the curricular connections between geometry and algebra, and the use of motion and continuity.

The intended audience would include curriculum developers, researchers, teachers, and curriculum supervisors.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $48.00
Pages: 116
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
Imprint: Information Age Publishing
Series: Research in Mathematics Education
Publication Date: 29 January 2008
ISBN: 9781593116965
Format: Paperback
BISACs: EDUCATION / Teaching / Subjects / General, Teaching of a specific subject, Curriculum planning and development
REVIEWS Icon

Acknowledgements
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. The "Big Bang" of Geometry: Euclid's Elements
Chapter 3. Steps in the History of the Geometry Curiculum
Chapter 4. Where Are We Now and Where Are We Going?
References
About the Author