Blatto-Vallee Gary, Kelly Ronald R, Gaustad Martha G, Porter Jeffrey, Fonzi Judith
Department of Science and Mathematics, National Technical Institute for the Deaf, Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, NY 14623-5604, USA.
J Deaf Stud Deaf Educ. 2007 Fall;12(4):432-48. doi: 10.1093/deafed/enm022. Epub 2007 Jun 4.
This research examined the use of visual-spatial representation by deaf and hearing students while solving mathematical problems. The connection between spatial skills and success in mathematics performance has long been established in the literature. This study examined the distinction between visual-spatial "schematic" representations that encode the spatial relations described in a problem versus visual-spatial "pictorial" representations that encode only the visual appearance of the objects described in a problem. A total of 305 hearing (n = 156) and deaf (n = 149) participants from middle school, high school, and college participated in this study. At all educational levels, the hearing students performed significantly better in solving the mathematical problems compared to their deaf peers. Although the deaf baccalaureate students exhibited the highest performance of all the deaf participants, they only performed as well as the hearing middle school students who were the lowest scoring hearing group. Deaf students remained flat in their performance on the mathematical problem-solving task from middle school through the college associate degree level. The analysis of the students' problem representations showed that the hearing participants utilized visual-spatial schematic representation to a greater extent than did the deaf participants. However, the use of visual-spatial schematic representations was a stronger positive predictor of mathematical problem-solving performance for the deaf students. When deaf students' problem representation focused simply on the visual-spatial pictorial or iconic aspects of the mathematical problems, there was a negative predictive relationship with their problem-solving performance. On two measures of visual-spatial abilities, the hearing students in high school and college performed significantly better than their deaf peers.
本研究考察了聋哑学生和听力正常的学生在解决数学问题时对视觉空间表征的运用情况。空间技能与数学成绩成功之间的联系在文献中早已确立。本研究考察了视觉空间“示意图”表征(对问题中描述的空间关系进行编码)与视觉空间“图像”表征(仅对问题中描述的对象的视觉外观进行编码)之间的区别。共有305名来自初中、高中和大学的听力正常的学生(n = 156)和聋哑学生(n = 149)参与了本研究。在所有教育水平上,与聋哑同龄人相比,听力正常的学生在解决数学问题方面表现得明显更好。尽管聋哑学士学位学生在所有聋哑参与者中表现最佳,但他们的表现仅与得分最低的听力正常的初中学生相当。聋哑学生在从初中到大专学历水平的数学问题解决任务中的表现保持平稳。对学生问题表征的分析表明,听力正常的参与者比聋哑参与者在更大程度上利用视觉空间示意图表征。然而,对于聋哑学生来说,使用视觉空间示意图表征是数学问题解决表现更强的积极预测因素。当聋哑学生的问题表征仅仅聚焦于数学问题的视觉空间图像或图标方面时,这与他们的问题解决表现存在负向预测关系。在两项视觉空间能力测试中,高中和大学的听力正常的学生比他们的聋哑同龄人表现得明显更好。