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Investigating A Non-Euclidean Geometry

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2016

Lucilla Cannizzaro
Affiliation:
Laboratorio di Didattica delle Scienze, Facoltà de Scienze, Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, 00185Roma
Mauro Carosi
Affiliation:
Laboratorio di Didattica delle Scienze, Facoltà de Scienze, Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, 00185Roma

Extract

In this article we describe how a group of third year mathematics students of the University of Rome who were following a mathematics education option explored some of the properties of hyperbolic plane geometry before preparing a unit on non-Euclidean geometry to be used with sixth-formers at the Liceo Virgilio, Rome. We recall here that the Mathematical Association considered the possibility of such work in its 1923 report on geometry [1]. Nowadays the report is associated with the three ‘stages’ of geometry teaching, A, B and C, but in fact it proposed two further stages. The fifth stage included non-Euclidean geometry both ‘for a few gifted specialists’ and also because it might interest ‘able boys who are not mathematical specialists’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Mathematical Association 1982

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References

1. The Teaching of Geometry in Schools. Bell (1923).Google Scholar
2. Sawyer, W. W., Prelude to Mathematics. Penguin (1955).Google Scholar
3. Pedoe, D., A Course of Geometry for Colleges and Universities. Cambridge (1970).Google Scholar
4. Cannizzaro, L. and Carosi, M.. Investigating a non-linear transformation, Mathematics Teaching, 97, 3841 (1981).Google Scholar