This valuable resource is recommended for upper-division undergraduates, graduate students, and practitioners.

Choice

The contributors variously employ sociological, anthropological, psychological, sociocultural, political, and mathematical perspectives to produce powerful analyses of mathematics teaching and learning.

Adolescence

Multiple Perspectives on Mathematics Teaching and Learning offers a collection of chapters that take a new look at mathematics education. Leading authors, such as Deborah Ball, Paul Cobb, Jim Greeno, Stephen Lerman, and Michael Apple, draw from a range of perspectives in their analyses of mathematics teaching and learning. They address such practical problems as: the design of teaching and research that acknowledges the social nature of learning, maximizing the impact of teacher education programs, increasing the learning opportunities of students working in groups, and ameliorating the impact of male domination in mixed classrooms. These practical insights are combined with important advances in theory. Several of the authors address the nature of learning and teaching, including the ways in which theories and practices of mathematics education recognize learning as simultaneously social and individual. The issues addressed include teaching practices, equity, language, assessment, group work and the broader political context of mathematics reform. The contributors variously employ sociological, anthropological, psychological, sociocultural, political, and mathematical perspectives to produce powerful analyses of mathematics teaching and learning.
Les mer
<p><i>Multiple Perspectives on Mathematics Teaching and Learning</i> offers a collection of chapters that take a new look at mathematics education.</p>
Introduction: The Intricacies of Knowledge, Practice, and Theory by Jo Boaler The Social Turn in Mathematics Education Research by Stephen Lerman The Importance of a Situated View of Learning to the Design of Research and Instruction by Paul Cobb Interweaving Content and Pedagogy in Teaching and Learning to Teach: Knowing and Using Mathematics by Deborah Loewenberg Ball and Hyman Bass Who Counts What As Math? Emergent and Assigned Mathematics Problems in a Project-Based Classroom by Reed Stevens Effects of Dominant and Subordinate Masculinities on Interactions in a Collaborative Learning Classroom by Mary Barnes Identity, Agency, and Knowing in Mathematics Worlds by Jo Boaler and James G. Greeno "Cracking the Code" of Mathematics Classrooms: School Success As a Function of Linguistic, Social, and Cultural Background by Robyn Zevenbergen Better Assessment in Mathematics Education? A Social Perspective by Candia Morgan Mathematics Reform Through Conservative Modernization? Standards, Markets, and Inequality in Education by Michael W. Apple Indexes
Les mer
Internationally, Mathematics Education remains an area of great controversy provoking much passion from politicians, administrators, teachers and parents, and those learners whose voices are rarely heard, but also inducing sounds of despair from academics and researchers who see little sign of the products of their work being taken seriously at the policy and practice level. This series provides an entry into current important ideas and research as seen from the mathematics education perspective. Each volume will contain a review article that will set the scene, together with original commissioned papers, spanning all appropriate levels of learning from early years to university. One objective of the series is to be international is scope and support the colleagues worldwide who do not have a history of, or easy access to publication by teaming them with experienced colleagues who are interested in the same topic and can share relevant literature.
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781567505344
Publisert
2000-07-30
Utgiver
Vendor
Praeger Publishers Inc
Vekt
624 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
288

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

JO BOALER is Assistant Professor of mathematics education at Stanford University. She is a former secondary school teacher of mathematics. She has also worked as the deputy director of a national assessment project in the UK, researching and developing assessments for students across the country. She is author of the book Experiencing School Mathematics. Her research interests include mathematics teaching approaches, assessment and equity. She is currently the PI of a NSF project investigating the relationship between mathematics teaching, learning, and curriculum approach.