Use of Geogebra in Enhancing Students’ Conceptual Understanding of Circle Theorems: An Action Research Study
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Kathmandu University School of Education
Abstract
This research study aimed to determine how GeoGebra can improve the Grade 10
students’ conceptual understanding of circle theorems. The research was motivated by
the consistent decline in the mathematics performance of the students in Nepal's
Secondary Education Examination (SEE) by the Ministry of Education (MOE, 2016).
As a subject teacher and researcher, I created a 15-day intervention that employed one
of the ICT tools, GeoGebra, to examine how the simultaneous visualization through
technology helped in motivating, reasoning, and understanding the students. The
study was conducted within 15 days at an Institutional English Boarding School in the
Kaski District, in which 32 students were involved. I purposely selected six students
as key participants who had to be very different from each other to watch carefully
how each learner interacted with GeoGebra and how each one grasped the circle
theorems valuation, and at the same time, to give all 32 students full intervention and
an equal chance to learn.
I used an interpretivist paradigm with a qualitative data approach, used pre-
and post-tests, observed students in the classroom, used parts of reflective journals,
and interviewed six purposefully sampled students who vary in ability level. The
findings displayed specific progress in the way students improved their conceptual
understanding, the ability to perform well on tests, and the way they engaged with and
felt about geometry. They showed that they could argue better, and they could read a
diagram more correctly about theorems of circles. When employing thematic analysis,
I could interpret those changes by looking at what students did with GeoGebra: they
moved objects, they tested theorems, they perceived relationships, and they developed
significance as a result of their work in groups. These creation of meaning processes
showed how lively settings for math helped learners to move away from just
memorizing theorems to knowing in a deeper way why they work. The research found
that GeoGebra helps teaching circle theorems by making the learners understand
more, encouraging them to ask questions and answers, and fostering a good attitude. It
also changed how I, as a teacher, used to be. I moved from being a person who only
told to a person who helped learners find their own answers and allowed them to
make a classroom where different ones play a part. Findings from this study reflect
the importance of GeoGebra tools in mathematics classes, listening to lessons on
GeoGebra pedagogy, and using GeoGebra in lessons based on the curriculum.
Another research might build on this work with more detailed, extended time frames
to determine the amount that persisted, in comparison with lessons that involved
computers and lessons that didn't, and how useful GeoGebra is in other areas of math,
such as when employing Sets, Algebra, Transformations, and Coordinate Geometry.
