scholarly journals História do Ensino de Geometria e Formação de Professores: Algumas Reflexões

2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (34) ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
Maria Célia Leme da Silva
Keyword(s):  

O artigo tem por objetivo elaborar um panorama das articulações de estudos da História da Educação Matemática e a Formação de professores que ensinam matemática, no cenário brasileiro atual, e relatar e tecer primeiras considerações e reflexões sobre o workshop “Ensino de geometria nos anos iniciais: conhecendo o passado, refletindo sobre o presente”, desenvolvido durante o XII Summer Workshop in Mathematics, e sobre outras oportunidades na modalidade remota. Como conclusões, indica-se a necessidade de parcerias entre pesquisadores dos dois campos de investigação – Formação de Professores que ensinam matemática e da História da Educação Matemática –, de modo a agregar e reunir resultados de pesquisas em prol de respostas mais eficazes para a formação e a atuação de professores que ensinam matemática.

1960 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 130-134
Author(s):  
Jewell Garner
Keyword(s):  

2010 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 62-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leondra N. Burchall

Abstract St. George's, Bermuda received World Heritage status in 2000, and today many of the island's majority Black population still don't know what that means. Is it because we aren't educating or marketing this ““achievement”” or do the peripheral voices and marginal communities view the designation as unimportant or an imposition? This case study examines the importance of examining the disparity in how we, and our public, interpret and value history. My job is to examine these acts of inclusion/exclusion and shift the balance with programs like ““Bringing History to Life,”” a student summer workshop series that uses different mediums to interrogate history.


Author(s):  
Michelle Bae-Dimitriadis

Decolonizing girlhood illuminates an attempt to refuse and recover the pathological representation of Indigenous refugee girls by going beyond the discourse of the Western construction of girlhood. It takes an anticolonial, critical race feminist approach to the understanding of girlhood that challenges the intersectional, racialized exclusion and the deficit representations of Indigenous refugee girls, which are often reinforced by humanitarian schemes of embodied vulnerability. The digital visual fiction stories created by Karen tribe refugee girls in a media arts summer workshop reposition their presence by creating spaces in which they can speak their own desires, share their imaginings, and portray their struggles. Through this experience, these girls challenge colonial social realities and the fantasies of democracy. Ultimately, their futuristic visual fiction acts as a form of counter-storytelling that illustrates an alternative curriculum space and flips the hegemonic script for empowerment.


1976 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-18
Author(s):  
Ian Edlund
Keyword(s):  

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