Ukraine: School Mathematics Education in the Last 30 Years

Author(s):  
Vasyl O. Shvets ◽  
Valentyna G. Bevz ◽  
Oleksandr V. Shkolnyi ◽  
Olha I. Matiash
2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 172-182
Author(s):  
Dalene M. Swanson ◽  
Hong-Lin Yu ◽  
Stella Mouroutsou

Mathematics education has been notoriously slow at interpreting inclusion in ways that are not divisive. Dominant views of educational inclusion in school mathematics classrooms have been shaped by social constructions of ability. These particularly indelible constructions derive from the perceived hierarchical nature of mathematics and the naturalised assumption that mathematisation is purely an intellectual exercise. Constructions of ability, therefore, emanate from the epistemic structures of mathematics education as predominantly practiced worldwide, and the prevalence of proceduralism and exclusion in those practices. Assumptions about ‘ability’ have become a truth to mathematical aptitude held by mathematics teachers in schools. This includes schools across Scotland. In Scotland, the government owes the ‘included pupil’ a legal obligation to provide additional support for learning under section 1(1) of the Education (Additional Support for Learning) (Scotland) Act 2004. However, classroom practices deployed around socially-constructed notions of ability have seen schools moving away from an emphasis on ‘additional’ to an expansive interpretation of ‘different from’ in the language of section 1(3)(a) of the Act 2004. This shift, therefore, reinstalls exclusionary effects to school mathematics practices by creating the conditions for some pupils, constructed in terms of disabilities or low ability, to be afforded a more inferior education than others. While philosophical conversations around whether these practices are ethical, egalitarian or democratic might ensue, there is also the human rights angle, which asks whether such practices are even lawful.


2021 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivanka Mincheva

The paper studies solving a triangle in primary school mathematics education. It proposes a system of problems reflecting the classification of the concept of triangle according to the sides and the angles. Each subsystem of a given main system includes a basic problem with generalized formulation and a sample solution followed by problems illustrating the basic problem. The methodological analysis encompasses some didactic components – short description, construction/drawing, sample solution, necessary component concepts, component pieces of knowledge and component problems. All drawings in the study have been made by using the mathematical software GeoGebra in order to ensure dynamism and clarity, and subsequently to achieve easier understanding of a problem and finding out its solution.


2011 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 68-69
Author(s):  
Andrea Christie

Share news about happenings in the field of elementary school mathematics education, views on matters pertaining to teaching and learning mathematics in the early childhood or elementary school years, and reactions to previously published opinion pieces or articles.


2016 ◽  
Vol 22 (6) ◽  
pp. 325-329 ◽  
Author(s):  
Drew Polly

Readers share news about happenings in the field of elementary school mathematics education, views on matters pertaining to teaching and learning mathematics in the early childhood or elementary school years, and reactions to previously published opinion pieces or articles.


Pythagoras ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Paola Valero ◽  
Gloria García ◽  
Francisco Camelo ◽  
Gabriel Mancera ◽  
Julio Romero

On the grounds of our work as researchers, teacher educators and teachers engaging with a socio-political approach in mathematics education in Colombia, we propose to understand democracy in terms of the possibility of constructing a social subjectivity for the dignity of being. We address the dilemma of how the historical insertion of school mathematics in relation to the Colonial project of assimilation of Latin American indigenous peoples into the episteme of the Enlightenment and Modernity is in conflict with the possibility of the promotion of a social subjectivity in mathematics classrooms. We illustrate a pedagogical possibility to move towards a mathematics education for social subjectivity with our work in reassembling the notion of geometrical space in the Colombian secondary school mathematics curriculum with notions of space from critical geography and the problem of territorialisation, and Latin American epistemology with the notion of intimate space as an important element of social subjectivity.


2011 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 4-5
Author(s):  
Tyrette S. Carter

Share news about happenings in the field of elementary school mathematics education, views on matters pertaining to teaching and learning mathematics in the early childhood or elementary school years, and reactions to previously published opinion pieces or articles.


1970 ◽  
Vol 17 (6) ◽  
pp. 511-527
Author(s):  
C Alan Riedesel ◽  
Len Pikaart ◽  
Marilyn N. Suydam

This is the thirteenth in the series of annual listings of research concerned with elementary school mathematics.1 The annotated format used for the last two listings has been retained. The annotations do not summarize the study in most cases; rather, an attempt was made to state the findings that may be of particular importance to the teacher. They may serve to guide readers to those studies that are most pertinent for their needs. Little evaluation is possible when space is limited; however, each of the findings has some support within the limitations of the study on which it is based.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document