Title: Manipulatives, Limit Objects, and Mathematics Learning
1Manipulatives, Limit Objects, and Mathematics
Learning
Work supported in part by the Math in Motion
grant from the National Science Foundation
(REC-0087573).
2Mathematical Abstractions
- If mathematics education aims at familiarizing
students with abstractions. What does this mean? - Abstractions as entities that cannot be directly
touched, seen, heard, etc. - Why would bodily activity be relevant to learning
about mathematical abstractions?
3Abstractions and Tool Use (1)
- How and why would the use of tools which engage
eyes and hands in drawing, writing, manipulating,
or touching would be relevant to learning about
abstractions?
4Abstractions and Tool Use (2)
- The use of tools in mathematics learning is often
seen as a process of internalizing them
developing mental versions of the tool. - From this perspective abstractions are mental and
tool-uses are physical. Tool use (in the
physical domain) stimulates abstractions (in the
mental domain)
5Abstractions and Tool Use (3)
- In this presentation we want to advance an
alternative view. - Instead of splitting mental vs. physical we want
to describe doing and thinking as woven in body
activity. - Body activity in its infinite forms eye motion,
drawing, writing, grasping, gesturing, talking,
and so forth.
6Abstractions and Tool Use (4)
- Body activity can be largely covert or imaginary.
We might imagine ourselves drawing, for
instance, without actually drawing. But this act
of imagination has much in common with actual
drawing. - Examples from neuroscience research (e.g. imagine
seeing something far away)
7Abstractions and Tool Use (5)
- The episodes selected for this presentation
include one from a high school classroom where
the students are using the drawing machine to
draw a circle, as well as several episodes from
interviews with Greta, a high school student
8Our Focus Fluency with Mathematical Objects
that Can Be Approached
- Lets call those mathematical objects that can be
approximated in space Limit Objects. - Limit Object is a kind of abstraction.
- Examples circle, point, number, line, and so
forth.
9Our Focus Fluency with Limit Objects
10Our Focus Fluency with Limit Objects
Limit objects cannot be seen, touched, etc.
They are unperceivable as such
11Working with Limit Objects
- Drawing closer to the limit object
- Reflective Turns
Noticing their own ways of acting with the
drawing machine
12Working with Limit Objects
13Limit Objects and Their Footprints
- Making visible its footprints
- Making present its absence
- Tangible emptiness
14Limit Objects and Their Footprints
- Limit objects cannot be seen, touched, etc.,
unlike their footprints - We conceive of limit objects by tracing,
imagining, and talking about their footprints.
15Reflective Turns
16Abstractions and Tool Use (6)
- Instead of splitting mental vs. physical we want
to describe doing and thinking as woven in body
activity with tools and with others. - How does the use of tools participate in the
development of fluency with limit objects? - We will explore these questions by examining
interview episodes with Greta. A high school
student interviewed by David Carraher.
17Greta The problem of projecting a circle
18Greta The problem of projecting a circle
- Greta predicting 1.42
- Marking Circle .28
- Tracing Circle .58
- Tracing with the monitor .36
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19Greta The problem of projecting a circle
20Greta The problem of projecting a circle
- Approaching limit objects
Reflective turns
21Greta The problem of projecting a circle
- Approaching limit objects
Reflective turns
Gretas line of vision and the mediation of
language and symbol use
22Reflective Turns (1)
Seeing Ourselves Seeing
23Reflective Turns (2)
Seeing Ourselves Seeing from passive
contemplation Involves positioning ourselves
and shifting perspectives
24Abstractions and Tool Use (7)
- Instead of splitting mental vs. physical we want
to describe doing and thinking as woven in body
activity with tools and with others. - How does the use of tools participate in the
development of fluency with limit objects? - We will illustrate with Gretas episodes two
critical roles of tool use (1) Developing
sensitivities and (2) Readiness for action
25How does the use of tools participate in the
development of fluency with limit objects?
- 1. Developing Sensitivities
- Greta I have trouble, like, visualizing it two
dimensional David two dimensional like, I can
when I look through. I see it the rope on the
floor I don't see it on the screen.
26How does the use of tools participate in the
development of fluency with limit objects?
- 2. Readiness for action
- Greta like if I personally if I just stand here
without the camera I'd see the same thing as the
camera, like I'd see it that way