Abstract
This article presents a case study of a seven-year-old girl named Amanda who participated in an eighteen-week teaching experiment I conducted in order to model the development of her intuitive and informal topological ideas. I designed a new dynamic geometry environment that I used in each of the episodes of the teaching experiment to elicit these conceptions and further support their development. As the study progressed, I found that Amanda developed significant and authentic forms of geometric reasoning. It is these newly identified forms of reasoning, which I refer to as "qualitative geometry," that have implications for the teaching and learning of geometry and for research into students' mathematical reasoning.
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Greenstein, S. (2014). Making sense of qualitative geometry: The case of Amanda. Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 36, 73–94. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmathb.2014.08.004
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