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Context in geometry in secondary school mathematics textbooks
Mthethwa, Halalisani Mzomuhle; Ogbonnaya, Ugorji Iheanachor; Van Putten, Sonja
Mathematics textbooks are commonly considered to be tools for efficient teaching and
implementing change in mathematics classrooms worldwide, helping teachers to teach and learners
to learn. When the content as described in the curriculum is not faithfully and relevantly
represented in textbooks, learners’ opportunity is limited. Against this background, opportunity to
learn Euclidean geometry was investigated by scrutinising four Grade 11 mathematics textbooks
used in South African schools, using deductive content analysis. The Kurz Opportunity to Learn
(OTL) Model was the theoretical foundation focusing on content coverage and the quality of tasks.
In this paper, the embedding of context within geometry questions is investigated as one of the
criteria in judging the quality of tasks. The study revealed that although the four textbooks covered
almost all the Euclidean geometry topics in depth, contextualisation was absent, despite its ability
to improve learners’ problem recognition, interpretation and understanding abilities. All the
questions were intra-mathematical. With the use of contextualised tasks, possibly the real world
can enter the mathematics classroom, so that the age-old learner question, “Why am I doing this?”
may be answered with a demonstration of relevance.