Aspects of spatial thinking in geography textbook questions

This study examined questions embedded in four high school world geography textbooks to evaluate the degree to which the three components of spatial thinking were incorporated: concepts of space, tools of representation, and processes of reasoning. A three-dimensional taxonomy of spatial thinking to...

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Main Author: Jo, Injeong
Other Authors: Bednarz, Sarah W.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1516
http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1516
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-15162013-01-08T10:40:31ZAspects of spatial thinking in geography textbook questionsJo, InjeongSpatial thinkingGeography educationTextbookQuestionThis study examined questions embedded in four high school world geography textbooks to evaluate the degree to which the three components of spatial thinking were incorporated: concepts of space, tools of representation, and processes of reasoning. A three-dimensional taxonomy of spatial thinking to assess the questions was developed and validated via a survey of a group of spatial thinking experts. The spatiality of the concepts featured in 3,010 questions sampled from the textbooks was analyzed. The degree to which spatial representations and stimuli for reasoning were presented was also measured. Every question was compared against the taxonomy and coded. Inter-coder reliability was measured on about one percent of the sample questions. The results indicated that most questions that required knowledge about spatial concepts could be answered by knowing only simple concepts, such as location and place-specific identity, rather than complex concepts that require the identification of spatial patterns and associations. Not many questions asked students to incorporate spatial representations to answer the questions. Few questions did require creating a new representation. Students were asked to recall memorized geographic knowledge and terms rather than to infer, hypothesize, and generalize. Little difference was found among the four textbooks in that they rarely integrated the three components of spatial thinking into the questions. The research found that page-margin questions involved aspects of spatial thinking more than section- and chapter-assessment questions. Relatively simple concepts and lower level cognitive processes, however, were required in most questions that integrated the three components. The development of questions to help students practice complex processes of spatial thinking is necessary. The taxonomy developed in this research can be used as a guide to design curricular, instructional materials, and questions that incorporate aspects of spatial thinking.Bednarz, Sarah W.2010-01-15T00:00:32Z2010-01-16T01:52:13Z2010-01-15T00:00:32Z2010-01-16T01:52:13Z2007-082009-05-15BookThesisElectronic Thesistextelectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1516http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1516en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Spatial thinking
Geography education
Textbook
Question
spellingShingle Spatial thinking
Geography education
Textbook
Question
Jo, Injeong
Aspects of spatial thinking in geography textbook questions
description This study examined questions embedded in four high school world geography textbooks to evaluate the degree to which the three components of spatial thinking were incorporated: concepts of space, tools of representation, and processes of reasoning. A three-dimensional taxonomy of spatial thinking to assess the questions was developed and validated via a survey of a group of spatial thinking experts. The spatiality of the concepts featured in 3,010 questions sampled from the textbooks was analyzed. The degree to which spatial representations and stimuli for reasoning were presented was also measured. Every question was compared against the taxonomy and coded. Inter-coder reliability was measured on about one percent of the sample questions. The results indicated that most questions that required knowledge about spatial concepts could be answered by knowing only simple concepts, such as location and place-specific identity, rather than complex concepts that require the identification of spatial patterns and associations. Not many questions asked students to incorporate spatial representations to answer the questions. Few questions did require creating a new representation. Students were asked to recall memorized geographic knowledge and terms rather than to infer, hypothesize, and generalize. Little difference was found among the four textbooks in that they rarely integrated the three components of spatial thinking into the questions. The research found that page-margin questions involved aspects of spatial thinking more than section- and chapter-assessment questions. Relatively simple concepts and lower level cognitive processes, however, were required in most questions that integrated the three components. The development of questions to help students practice complex processes of spatial thinking is necessary. The taxonomy developed in this research can be used as a guide to design curricular, instructional materials, and questions that incorporate aspects of spatial thinking.
author2 Bednarz, Sarah W.
author_facet Bednarz, Sarah W.
Jo, Injeong
author Jo, Injeong
author_sort Jo, Injeong
title Aspects of spatial thinking in geography textbook questions
title_short Aspects of spatial thinking in geography textbook questions
title_full Aspects of spatial thinking in geography textbook questions
title_fullStr Aspects of spatial thinking in geography textbook questions
title_full_unstemmed Aspects of spatial thinking in geography textbook questions
title_sort aspects of spatial thinking in geography textbook questions
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1516
http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1516
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