Off-campus UNL users: To download campus access dissertations, please use the following link to log into our proxy server with your NU ID and password. When you are done browsing please remember to return to this page and log out.

Non-UNL users: Please talk to your librarian about requesting this dissertation through interlibrary loan.

Understanding Preservice Teachers’ Spatial Reasoning and How It Affects Their Work with Elementary Students

Michelle R Metzger, University of Nebraska - Lincoln

Abstract

Spatial reasoning involves those skills that allow one to mentally picture and manipulate objects which plays a unique role in learning and succeeding in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields (STEM). Despite the urgent need for strong spatial reasoning skills, our current education system spends little time fostering elementary students’ visual and spatial reasoning skills. This is becoming increasingly problematic as the need to become literate in the STEM fields has never been greater. The purpose of this qualitative study was to examine the spatial reasoning skills that preservice teachers demonstrated and how their spatial reasoning skills were used in the enactment of the tasks of teaching. Thirty-two preservice teachers completed a spatial reasoning task. Each preservice teacher then teamed with their practicum partner, created an adapted plan using the same spatial reasoning task, and enacted their plan with an elementary student in Grades K-5. Finding from this study indicate that the spatial reasoning skills of preservice teachers are weak, which hinders flexible thinking when observing elementary students engaged in a spatial reasoning task. How learners represent and connect pieces of knowledge is a critical factor in whether they will understand it deeply and can use it in problem solving.

Subject Area

Teacher education|Instructional Design|Elementary education

Recommended Citation

Metzger, Michelle R, "Understanding Preservice Teachers’ Spatial Reasoning and How It Affects Their Work with Elementary Students" (2019). ETD collection for University of Nebraska-Lincoln. AAI22587939.
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/dissertations/AAI22587939

Share

COinS