Soundoff!–Mathematics Reform for K-16

1996 ◽  
Vol 89 (7) ◽  
pp. 546-547
Author(s):  
Kenneth A. Ross

The past ten years have seen a remarkable amount of progress in improving mathematics education at all levels. The goal is to enable all students, including those from all racial and ethnic backgrounds and both sexes, to master and appreciate mathematics. The emphasis is on understanding mathematics instead of thoughtlessly grinding out answers. For various reasons. resistance is increasing to what is usually called “math reform,” which reflects some serious concerns that need to be addressed.

2000 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 2-4
Author(s):  
Judith T. Sowder

The beginning of a new year as well as the threshold of a new century and a new millennium seem appropriate times to take stock of where we have been and where we are going as a mathematics education research community. We have accomplished a great deal in the past half century of our existence, and I for one look forward to reading the forthcoming book on the history of mathematics education, edited by Jeremy Kilpatrick and George Stanic. That book will review for us our progress thus far, but what are the challenges we now face? This question will be addressed in various ways at various gatherings in the coming year, and new agendas will result from those discussions.


Author(s):  
Fulvia Furinghetti ◽  
Livia Giacardi ◽  
Marta Menghini

The years after WWII up to the late 1960s were crucial in the evolution of ICMI (International Commission on Mathematical Instruction) for both the settlement of some institutional aspects (mainly concerning the relationship with mathematicians) and the establishment of new trends of the activities. By referring to unpublished documents, this paper focuses on the role of two key figures in those years: Heinrich Behnke and Hans Freudenthal. As ICMI Secretary and later as President, Behnke tried to reshape the newborn ICMI after WWII and clarify the relationship with mathematicians. His action was completed by Freudenthal, who, as ICMI President, broke with the past and promoted initiatives that fostered the development of mathematics education as an academic field and the independence of ICMI from the community of mathematicians. Keywords: history, ICMI, mathematicians, mathematics education


1994 ◽  
Vol 25 (6) ◽  
pp. 559
Author(s):  
James W. Wilson ◽  
Catherine A. Brown ◽  
Carolyn Kieran ◽  
Frank K. Lester

This special issue of the Journal for Research in Mathematics Education was prepared to help celebrate the 25th anniversary year of the journal. President Mary Lindquist appointed an ad hoc task force to develop activities to mark this 25th year. Input was solicited from former editorial board members and editors and from others throughout mathematics education. We came to a recognition that doing something to reflect on the journal's journey over the past 25 years, while underscoring the scholarship that guides our work, would be a vehicle to help look ahead to the next 25 years.


1978 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 233-237
Author(s):  
Jane Sachar

Although there has been extensive research in elementary mathematics education during the past 25 years, the important area of mental arithmetic has remained relatively untouched. Mental arithmetic, in contrast to traditional arithmetic, includes items presented orally with no supporting visual sti muli. Although most arithmetic students are confronted daily with problems requiring skills in mental arithmetic, schools are only beginning to recognize the importance of these skills.


2009 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 354
Author(s):  
M. Kathleen Heid

I recently attended a meeting of research journal editors at which we shared some of our practices and procedures. The editors represented a range of educational fields. Impressed by the nature and number of reviews that the JRME editorial office requests and receives, one of the editors of a non-mathematics-education journal offered this explanation: “That's because the mathematics education group is really a community.” Thinking about how good it made me feel to be a member of such a well-regarded community, I reflected on the remarkable work I had seen over the past year and a half from members of our community. During that time, we received 1687 reviews (give or take a few). I continue to be impressed by the careful and insightful reviews that constantly populate the JRME mailbox.


1993 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 274-278
Author(s):  
Anna Sierpinska ◽  
Jeremy Kilpatrick ◽  
Nicolas Balacheff ◽  
A. Geoffrey Howson ◽  
Anna Sfard ◽  
...  

As mathematics education has become better established as a domain of scienti fic research (if not as a scientific discipline), exactly what this research is and what its results are have become less clear. The hi story of the past three International Congresses on Mathematical Education demonstrates the need for greater clarity. At the Budapest congress in 1988, in particular, there was a general feeling that mathematics educators from different parts of the world. countries, or even areas of the same country often talk past one another. There seems to be a lack of consensus on what it means to be a mathematics educator. Standards of scientific quality and the criteria for accepting a paper vary considerably among the more than 250 journals on mathematics education published throughout the world.


2010 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 216-235
Author(s):  
Timothy Boerst ◽  
Jere Confrey ◽  
Daniel Heck ◽  
Eric Knuth ◽  
Diana V. Lambdin ◽  
...  

The National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) is committed to strengthening relations between research and practice and to the development of a coherent knowledge base that is usable in practice. The fifth of NCTM's strategic priorities states, “Bring existing research into the classroom, and identify and encourage research that addresses the needs of classroom practice” (NCTM, 2008). The need to work toward connection and coherence is not unique to the field of mathematics education. Fields such as medicine (e.g., Clancy, 2007), software engineering (e.g., Gorschek, Garre, Larsson, & Wohlin, 2006), and social work (e.g., Hess & Mullen, 1995) routinely attend to these issues. Researchers in many fields strive to find new ways or to engage more effectively through existing means to enhance coherence and connection. In a sense, this is not a goal that can be achieved definitively, but one that requires persistent engagement. In education, the constant flux of variables in the system, such as curriculum, goals for student learning, and school contexts, requires that new connections between research and practice be investigated and that old connections be reexamined. Changes in educational contexts open new territory in need of study and also challenge the coherence of explanations grounded in previous research. In this way, attention of the field to connection and coherence is neither unique to mathematics education nor an effort due solely to inadequacies of research efforts in the past.


2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (5) ◽  
pp. 284-287 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lynn Liao Hodge ◽  
Michael Lawson

Collaboration is central to impacting mathematics teaching and learning. As a university mathematics education professor (the first author) and a graduate student in mathematics education and former high school mathematics teacher (the second author), we have initiated partnerships with urban and rural middle schools, families, and preservice teachers during the past five years, using Family Math Nights (FMNs) as the vehicle for collaboration. FMNs are events that usually take place in school gyms, libraries, or cafeterias to promote awareness and inspire interest in K-12 mathematics education. The events are highly interactive, with stations that allow both adults and students to interact with teachers to better understand what inquiry and best practices in mathematics look like. The approach that we facilitated is quite different from the typical approach to designing and implementing FMNs.


1965 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 131-138
Author(s):  
Joseph M. Scandura

The purpose of this paper is not to review all or even much of the past or current research in mathematics education; this has been done elsewhere. Monographs covering research in mathematics education up to about 1960, for example, are available from the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Some of the NCTM yearbooks also provide a good source.


1998 ◽  
Vol 91 (1) ◽  
pp. 4
Author(s):  
Virginia Horak

The past nine years. since the publication of the first NCTM Standards, have been exciting ones that ushered 1n a national focus on teachmg and learning mathematics We all have been compelled to examine what we teach. how we teach, and l1ow we assess our students' learning. But now is not the time to say, “We have made it: we have done that.” Mathematics education is not only alive and well in 1998. but 1t remams dynamic and evolvmg. The mathematics education community and NCTM, in particular.


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