How Must a Polygon Be According to Hard of Hearing Students? An Investigation with a Semiotic Approach

This study explores how hard of hearing students decided whether the shape was a polygon and which semiotic sources were used when the students engaged in explaining geometrical concepts. It was defined how the students interacted with geometric shapes using semiotic sources and examined how such mu...

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Main Author: Nejla Gürefe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hipatia Press 2022-06-01
Series:REDIMAT
Online Access:https://hipatiapress.com/hpjournals/index.php/redimat/article/view/6097
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author Nejla Gürefe
author_facet Nejla Gürefe
author_sort Nejla Gürefe
collection DOAJ
description This study explores how hard of hearing students decided whether the shape was a polygon and which semiotic sources were used when the students engaged in explaining geometrical concepts. It was defined how the students interacted with geometric shapes using semiotic sources and examined how such multimodal interactions with geometric figures displayed their reasoning. The study was a case study and carried out three hard of hearing students. The data was collected through interviews and analyzed with content analysis. It was detected that the students paid attention to edge, angle, and vertex of the shapes in the process of identifying polygon. It was seen that the students used gesture, speech, sign language, inscriptions which are semiotic sources and personal or mathematical definitions to express polygon concept. However, it has been determined that students have some misconceptions in the process of explaining concepts. It is suggested that the words used in the concept definition should be selected carefully by the teachers to teach the concepts correctly and the teachers use hand signs for concepts in their lesson.
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spelling doaj.art-94bb4a8e11e245cdbdaeb8fa96e840392023-02-12T12:54:39ZengHipatia PressREDIMAT2014-36212022-06-0111210.17583/redimat.6097How Must a Polygon Be According to Hard of Hearing Students? An Investigation with a Semiotic ApproachNejla Gürefe0Usak UniversityThis study explores how hard of hearing students decided whether the shape was a polygon and which semiotic sources were used when the students engaged in explaining geometrical concepts. It was defined how the students interacted with geometric shapes using semiotic sources and examined how such multimodal interactions with geometric figures displayed their reasoning. The study was a case study and carried out three hard of hearing students. The data was collected through interviews and analyzed with content analysis. It was detected that the students paid attention to edge, angle, and vertex of the shapes in the process of identifying polygon. It was seen that the students used gesture, speech, sign language, inscriptions which are semiotic sources and personal or mathematical definitions to express polygon concept. However, it has been determined that students have some misconceptions in the process of explaining concepts. It is suggested that the words used in the concept definition should be selected carefully by the teachers to teach the concepts correctly and the teachers use hand signs for concepts in their lesson.https://hipatiapress.com/hpjournals/index.php/redimat/article/view/6097
spellingShingle Nejla Gürefe
How Must a Polygon Be According to Hard of Hearing Students? An Investigation with a Semiotic Approach
REDIMAT
title How Must a Polygon Be According to Hard of Hearing Students? An Investigation with a Semiotic Approach
title_full How Must a Polygon Be According to Hard of Hearing Students? An Investigation with a Semiotic Approach
title_fullStr How Must a Polygon Be According to Hard of Hearing Students? An Investigation with a Semiotic Approach
title_full_unstemmed How Must a Polygon Be According to Hard of Hearing Students? An Investigation with a Semiotic Approach
title_short How Must a Polygon Be According to Hard of Hearing Students? An Investigation with a Semiotic Approach
title_sort how must a polygon be according to hard of hearing students an investigation with a semiotic approach
url https://hipatiapress.com/hpjournals/index.php/redimat/article/view/6097
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