Students face difficulties solving area of composite figures when the region which they are required to work out could not be solved by simply using the formula. Researchers such as Spiegel and Ginat (2017) attribute this difficulty to students’ unfamiliarity with the diversity of composite shape configurations. As put together in a study by Harris, Logan and Lowrie (2023), students with low spatial visualization skills would therefore produce more errors, despite adequate procedural knowledge.
In our study, we aimed to determine students’ spatial visualization difficulties and how these difficulties hinder them in the solving a complex area of composite figure task involving overlapping quarter circles. Tasks consisting of semi-circles and quarter-circles in area of composite figures were adapted from grade 6 school textbooks as it is the year which Singapore elementary school students are first introduced to the concept of the area of circles.
Findings of the study revealed that for one of the questions with overlapping quarter-circles in a square, some of the participants were able to recognize the common shapes and therefore had partial progress in working out the relevant areas. However, they had issues disembedding and assembling the composite shape as a part-part whole structure. Instances of participants’ solutions would be shared during the presentation, which shapes our recommendations for classroom teaching so as to develop students’ spatial visualization skills.