Teaching & Teacher Training, Fun & Educational Math, Mathematics
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Overview
This book presents an approach to the teaching of mathematics that departs radically from conventional prescription-oriented and management-based methods. It brings together recent developments in such diverse fields as continental and pragmatist philosophy, enactivist thought, critical discourses, cognitive theory, evolution, ecology, and mathematics, and challenges the assumptions that permeate much of mathematics teaching. The discussion focuses on the language used to frame the role of the teacher and is developed around the commonsense distinctions drawn between thought and action, subject and object, individual and collective, fact and fiction, teacher and student, and classroom tasks and real life.The discussion also addresses the question of how mathematics teaching can be reformed to better suit current academic and social climates. Making use of the theoretical framework of enactivism, the book explores the subject through an account of a middle school teacher's appreciation and understanding of her role. Teaching mathematics, as both the report of this teacher's experience and the discussion make clear, demands an embracing of ambiguity, uncertainty, complexity, and moral responsibility.
Editorials
Booknews
Departing radically from conventional pedagogical methods, Davis (curriculum studies, U. of British Columbia) uses such diverse fields as continental and pragmatists philosophy, enactivist thought, critical discourses, cognitive theory, evolution, and ecology to challenge the assumptions that permeate much of mathematics teaching. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)Book Details
Published
February 1, 2013
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Pages
360
ISBN
9781136520914