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1.
Considerations of how mathematics can be effectively taught and learnt may be cognitive, affective or sociocultural in approach. ??What students value in effective mathematics learning?? is a research study of the Third Wave Project, an international consortium of research teams adopting a sociocultural approach to investigate the harnessing of relevant values to optimise school mathematics teaching and learning. This paper seeks to contextualise the study, as part of the study examines what the high-achieving East Asian mathematics students value. The study is framed by knowledge relating to the relative cultural influence on effectiveness in mathematics learning, Alan Bishop??s values in mathematics education and the role of interactions in education, in particular David Tripp??s idea of critical incidents as reflecting professional judgement (and, thus, underlying values). Features of the innovative qualitative research design are also presented, which include the facilitation of photo-voice, the argument for an international collaborative team and focus group interviews for all values research, and a two-stage data analysis process aimed at clarifying both etic and emic perspectives.  相似文献   

2.
Kyungmee Park 《ZDM》2012,44(2):121-135
This study identifies the characteristics of mathematics classrooms in Korea. First, conventional Korean mathematics lessons are analyzed from the perspective of “theory of variation”. Second, an innovative lesson for gifted children is reported in detail and analyzed from the perspective of “Lakatos’ proofs and refutations”. Third, the classroom characteristics identified in both the conventional lessons and the innovative lesson are interpreted in terms of the underlying cultural values that they share with other East Asian countries. The study concludes that although the two faces of Korean mathematics lessons look different, they may flow from the same “heart”—that of the common Confucian heritage culture culture, and in particular East Asian pragmatism.  相似文献   

3.
Lidong Wang  Xiaoqing Li  Na Li 《ZDM》2014,46(7):1051-1060
Mathematics education is a cultural-specific social activity. China, as a developing country with a long history and a unique culture, has the largest number of teachers and students in the world. Hence, it is of significance to explore the issue of the impact of socio-economic status (SES) on mathematics education within the Chinese context. However, investigations aiming to address this issue are relatively rare. This study was designed to examine the relationship between Chinese students’ SES and their mathematics achievements. Results reveal that Chinese students’ SES exerts significant influence on their mathematics achievements, and several important constituents of SES, such as parents’ education and family income, stand out among others. In this paper, the cultural causes of the influence are discussed, together with a general introduction to the social and educational context. These could partly explain the empirical results, along with factors such as the values of education in traditional Chinese culture and the current important status of mathematics in modern society as well as Chinese school curriculum materials’ effect on students’ mathematics achievements. The economic and social situation in China, especially the imbalanced distribution of educational resources between and within the urban and rural areas, could magnify the role of SES in mathematics achievements. Finally, the future direction of measuring and interpreting the SES’s influence on mathematics achievement in the Chinese context is also discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Wee Tiong Seah  Aihui Peng 《ZDM》2012,44(1):71-82
This article reports on a scoping study conducted in Australia and Sweden to facilitate the understanding of the values that are associated with effective learning of mathematics in Asian classrooms. Nineteen ??Western?? values have been identified, of which three (explanation, sharing and fun) were commonly embraced in the two countries. It is also evident that traits that are valued can be and are demonstrated in different forms. The implications for improving mathematics education through the harnessing of values are discussed. The distinction made between what is valued and the forms the value can take should empower classroom teachers to incorporate values flexibly in different classroom contexts.  相似文献   

5.
JeongSuk Pang 《ZDM》2011,43(6-7):777-789
Cases have been used in mathematics teacher education with increasing prominence. Yet, there is little research that confirms cases as pedagogical tools to improve prospective teacher expertise, specifically in Asian contexts. This article illustrates how a specific case-based pedagogy was developed and implemented in Korea to increase prospective elementary teacher expertise in terms of paying attention to the mathematics-specific features of a lesson. The results showed that the participant teachers’ analytic foci moved from general to substantive features of a mathematics lesson. This tendency was evident when they reflected on their own teaching and was confirmed by their self-assessment. Given this, issues and suggestions in teacher education programs to promote teacher expertise in terms of mathematics-specific analysis ability are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
但琦  严尚安 《大学数学》2005,21(3):128-131
首先综述了数学教育技术发展的历史与现状,然后讨论了数学教育技术的四大功能:计算与猜想功能、动态演示功能、智能化的教育功能和数据处理功能,在课件的制作使用中怎样运用教育技术,以及网络教育对数学教育的作用,最后讨论了目前数学教育技术存在的问题.  相似文献   

7.
Werner Walsch 《ZDM》2003,35(4):153-156
The professional field dealing with teaching and learning mathematics was called in former East Germany (German Democratic Republic, GDR) ”Methodik des Mathematikunterrichts” (methodology and pedagogy of mathematics education). The development of this discipline between 1945 and 1989 (the year of reunification) is described. In addition the contributions of East German researchers to research on mathematics instruction are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
In different international studies on mathematical achievement East Asian students outperformed the students from Western countries. A deeper analysis shows that this is not restricted to routine tasks but also affects students’ performance for complex mathematical problem solving and proof tasks. This fact seems to be surprising since the mathematics instruction in most of the East Asian countries is described as examination driven and based on memorising rules and facts. In contrast, the mathematics classroom in western countries aims at a meaningful and individualised learning. In this article we discuss this “paradox” in detail for Taiwan and Germany as two typical countries from East Asia and Western Europe.  相似文献   

9.
Comparative studies have gained significant influence in the last decades, and school systems of many countries have been revised referring to better results of other countries in international large-scale assessments. Authors of such studies commonly link their interpretations of the results to distinctions between “Eastern” and “Western” cultures, in particular with respect to the consistent and continuing outstanding performance of East Asian learners compared with their Western counterparts. One question is whether the same achievement pattern holds for future teachers and whether similar cultural differences may cause it. International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement’s “Teacher Education and Development Study in Mathematics” (TEDS-M) was the first comparative study that focused on the outcomes of teacher education with standardised testing. In this paper—based on the TEDS-M results—commonalities and differences in the achievement of future teachers from Eastern and Western countries are explored and related to a cultural perspective. Cultural differences between Eastern and Western approaches concerning mathematics, mathematics education and mathematics teachers are analysed with respect to the achievement pattern. The paper closes with reflections on possible consequences concerning the development of teachers’ knowledge and teachers’ expertise in mathematics education.  相似文献   

10.
Marcelo C. Borba 《ZDM》2009,41(4):453-465
Research on the influence of multiple representations in mathematics education gained new momentum when personal computers and software started to become available in the mid-1980s. It became much easier for students who were not fond of algebraic representations to work with concepts such as function using graphs or tables. Research on how students use such software showed that they shaped the tools to their own needs, resulting in an intershaping relationship in which tools shape the way students know at the same time the students shape the tools and influence the design of the next generation of tools. This kind of research led to the theoretical perspective presented in this paper: knowledge is constructed by collectives of humans-with-media. In this paper, I will discuss how media have shaped the notions of problem and knowledge, and a parallel will be developed between the way that software has brought new possibilities to mathematics education and the changes that the Internet may bring to mathematics education. This paper is, therefore, a discussion about the future of mathematics education. Potential scenarios for the future of mathematics education, if the Internet becomes accepted in the classroom, will be discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Edward A. Silver 《ZDM》2009,41(6):827-832
In most of the world, there is a broad public interest in cross-national comparisons. Despite the myriad difficulties inherent in such comparisons, and despite the fact that most studies explicitly acknowledge limited generalizability, news media representatives, policy makers, politicians and educators often take the findings at face value as providing solid scientific evidence of the achievement of students in the countries studied. This often leads in turn to superficial commentaries and unhelpful recommendations. Our task as scholars of mathematics education is to demonstrate the nuanced complexity of such comparisons. The papers in this issue of ZDM succeed in this regard. Using a range of scholarly perspectives (mathematical, psychological and socio-cultural), the authors offer many insightful observations regarding curriculum and curriculum materials in East Asian countries (especially China) and the USA, with careful attention to the central role of curriculum in the teaching and learning of mathematics in schools. In this commentary study I discuss a few of these insights and develop one illustrative example of how cross-national comparative analyses such as these could be used to sensibly inform policy discussions related to changes in mathematics curriculum, teaching, or teacher preparation.  相似文献   

12.
Beliefs constitute a central part of a person’s professional competencies and are crucial to the perception of situations as they influence our choice of actions. This paper focuses on epistemological beliefs about the nature of mathematics of future primary teachers from an international perspective. The data reported are part of a larger sample originating from the TEDS-M study which compares primary mathematics teacher education in 15 countries. In this paper we examine the pattern of beliefs of future teachers aiming to teach mathematics at primary level. We explore whether and to what extent beliefs concerning the nature of mathematics are influenced by cultural factors, in our case the extent to which a country’s culture can be characterized by an individualistic versus collectivistic orientation according to Hofstede’s terminology. In the first part of the paper, the literature on epistemological beliefs is reviewed and the role of culture and individualism/collectivism on the formation of beliefs concerning the nature of mathematics will be discussed. In the empirical part, means and distributions of belief ratings will be reported. Finally, multilevel analyses explore how much of the variation of belief preferences between countries can be explained by the individualistic orientation of a country.  相似文献   

13.
The role of metacognition in mathematics education is analyzed based on theoretical and empirical work from the last four decades. Starting with an overview on different definitions, conceptualizations and models of metacognition in general, the role of metacognition in education, particularly in mathematics education, is discussed. The article emphasizes the importance of metacognition in mathematics education, summarizing empirical evidence on the relationships between various aspects of metacognition and mathematics performance. As a main result of correlational studies, it can be shown that the impact of declarative metacognition on mathematics performance is substantial (sharing about 15–20% of common variance). Moreover, numerous intervention studies have demonstrated that “normal” learners as well as those with especially low mathematics performance do benefit substantially from metacognitive instruction procedures.  相似文献   

14.
This article describes some empirical research into using history in mathematics education. More precisely, it discusses a teaching module on the history of public-key cryptography and RSA, implemented in a Danish upper secondary mathematics class in the autumn of 2007. As part of the module the students were expected to write several essays illuminating different aspects of this history. The article discusses whether the students were able to reflect on meta-perspective issues of the evolution and development of mathematics and if so, then whether these reflections were anchored in the taught (and acquired) mathematics of public-key cryptography and RSA. The question of how teaching modules may be designed to take such matters into account is also discussed.  相似文献   

15.
This paper discusses aspects of a two-year study of a teacher-training course for adult mathematics education organized by a Brazilian landless peoples' social movement. It takes ethnomathematics as a theoretical framework in which cultural differences are central. The paper analyses some of the oral mathematics practices that mark the landless peoples' culture studied. In particular, it discusses a pedagogical process involving the articulation of oral mathematics practices with the use of the calculator, focusing on how pre-service teachers give meaning to their experience and on how cultural differences operated in this setting.  相似文献   

16.
Research in mathematics education that crosses national boundaries provides new insights into the development and improvement of the teaching and learning of mathematics. In particular, cross-national comparisons lead researchers to more explicit understanding of their own implicit theories about how teachers teach and how children learn mathematics in their local contexts as well as what is going on in school mathematics in other countries. Further, when researchers from multiple countries and regions study collaboratively aspects of teaching and learning of mathematics, the taken-for-granted familiar practices in the classroom can be questioned. Such cross-national comparisons provide opportunities for researchers and educators to probe typical dichotomies such as “high-performing” versus “low performing”, “teacher-centred versus student-centred”, or even “East versus West”, in searching for similarities and differences in educational policies and practices in different cultural contexts.  相似文献   

17.
This article articulates how mathematics (e.g., what they are, how they can be used, who they are by and for, who is able to do and understand them) are a social construct, just like racial or gender identities are social constructs. The authors describe how Political Conocimiento in Teaching Mathematics–a relational knowing that involves the entanglement of mathematics, pedagogies, students, and politics–can be used as a lens to reveal narratives about mathematics re(told) through stories (e.g., “Mathematics is culture-free, objective, and universal”). Drawing on their work with teachers, the authors offer an example scenario/activity and a teacher discussion that unpacks where mathematical stories are being told, from a dominant perspective, as well as how focusing on healthier narratives can help teachers work toward liberatory futures. Implications for teaching, teacher education, and future research are described.  相似文献   

18.
Ann R. Edwards 《ZDM》2011,43(1):7-16
Mathematics education research has not sufficiently theorized about mathematics teacher knowledge and practice, teacher learning, and teacher education in ways that are reflective of the specificities of the sociopolitical contexts of schooling. In the USA, this is particularly important for urban mathematics education. This paper examines the affordances and challenges of representing context in video records of practice, particularly in the urban context, for use in the preparation of mathematics teachers for urban settings. The discussion, grounded in current research and theory relevant to representations of teaching, urban education, and mathematics teacher education, takes up three key issues: how is a focus on the urban context relevant to the design of video records of practice for mathematics teacher education? How can video records support prospective teachers’ understandings of the sociopolitical contexts of mathematics teaching? How does a focus on the urban context impact the meaning teachers make of video records?  相似文献   

19.
This case study investigates the impact of the integration of information and communications technology (ICT) in mathematics visualization skills and initial teacher education programmes. It reports on the influence GeoGebra dynamic software use has on promoting mathematical learning at secondary school and on its impact on teachers’ conceptions about teaching and learning mathematics. This paper describes how GeoGebra-based dynamic applets – designed and used in an exploratory manner – promote mathematical processes such as conjectures. It also refers to the changes prospective teachers experience regarding the relevance visual dynamic representations acquire in teaching mathematics. This study observes a shift in school routines when incorporating technology into the mathematics classroom. Visualization appears as a basic competence associated to key mathematical processes. Implications of an early integration of ICT in mathematics initial teacher training and its impact on developing technological pedagogical content knowledge (TPCK) are drawn.  相似文献   

20.
In recent years, national organizations, mathematics educators, and policy makers have called for the development of elementary school mathematics coaches to improve mathematics teaching and learning in elementary schools. The literacy field has found success and promise in the work of instructional coaches, and the mathematics education community can benefit from what professionals in literacy have learned and practiced. This article presents a synthesis of empirical research about instructional coaches, in both literacy and mathematics, as well as the neo‐Vygotskian construct of assisted performance. Following the synthesis, implications are presented regarding how to develop the essential skills and knowledge needed for elementary school mathematics coaches as well as how to examine the impact of their efforts in schools.  相似文献   

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