What happens when a climber falls? Young climbers mathematise a climbing situation
Forfatter
Fyhn, Anne BirgitteSammendrag
Students in Norway and other countries experience vectors as a difficult topic. Four young skilled climbers, who all did
well in mathematics at school, participated in the Vector Study (VS). They participated for free and each lesson lasted
until the students decided it was over. The idea was to investigate how climbing may function as a basis for students’
development of a vector concept. The teaching goal was the parallelogram law of vector addition. The students
investigated what happens when a climber falls. They discussed the situation, and they tested it out in practice. They
also performed a supporting activity, a rope‐pulling situation, which provides insight into what happens in the
climbing situation. The students’ development is analysed by identifying a) Bishop’s six basic activities, b) the role of
angles, and c) manipulation of mental objects. The analysis reveals that relations between a vector’s magnitude and
direction was central in the students’ investigations. It is important that students develop two aspects of vectors before
the parallelogram law of addition is introduced. These are a) relations between angles and vectors, and b) the zero
vector.
Beskrivelse
Published version, source available at: http://scimath.net/articles/51/513.pdf