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1994 Book DidacticsOfMathematicsAsAScien
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See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/257927023 Didactics of Mathematics as a Scientific Discipline Book · January 1994 CITATIONS 110 READS 2,264 4 authors , including: Rolf Biehler Universität Paderborn 391 PUBLICATIONS 2,853 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE Roland W. Scholz Danube University Krems, Faculty of Economics and Gl… 532 PUBLICATIONS 18,845 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE Rudolf Sträßer Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen 68 PUBLICATIONS 1,007 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE All content following this page was uploaded by Roland W. Scholz on 25 December 2018. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. DIDACTICS OF MATHEMATICS AS A SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINE Mathematics Education Library VOLUME 13 Managing Editor A.J. Bishop, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia Editorial Board H. Bauersfeld, Bielefeld, Germany J. Kilpatrick, Athens, U.S.A. G. Leder, Melbourne, Australia S. Turnau, Krakow, Poland G. Vergnaud, Paris, France The titles published in this series are listed at the end of this volume. DIDACTIC S OF MATHEMATICS AS A SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINE Edited by ROLF BIEHLER ROLAND W. SCHOLZ RUDOLF STRÄSSER BERNARD WINKELMANN Institute for Didactics of Mathematics, University of Bielefeld, Germany KLUWER ACADEMIC PUBLISHERS NEW YORK, BOSTON, DORDRECHT, LONDON, MOSCOW eBook ISBN: 0-306-47204-X Print ISBN: 0-7923-2613-X ©2002 Kluwer Academic Publishers New York, Boston, Dordrecht, London, Moscow Print ©1994 Kluwer Academic Publishers All rights reserved No part of this eBook may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, recording, or otherwise, without written consent from the Publisher Created in the United States of America Visit Kluwer Online at: http://kluweronline.com and Kluwer's eBookstore at: http://ebooks.kluweronline.com Dordrecht Dedicated to Hans-Georg Steiner. R. B., R. W. S., R. S., B. W. Introduction Bernard Winkelmann Eclectic approaches to elementarization: Cases of curriculum construction in the United States James T. Fey Didactical engineering as a framework for the conception of teaching products Michèle Artigue Mathematical curricula and the underlying goals Uwe-Peter Tietze TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface 103 117 121 133 15 27 41 55 61 73 89 1 9 1. PREPARING MATHEMATICS FOR STUDENTS 2. TEACHER EDUCATION AND RESEARCH ON TEACHING Introduction Rolf Biehler Reflections on mathematical concepts as starting points for didactical thinking Hans-Joachim Vollrath Beyond subject matter: A psychological topology of teachers' professional knowledge Rainer Bromme Dialogue between theory and practice in mathematics education Heinz Steinbring On the application of science to teaching and teacher education Thomas J. Cooney 3. INTERACTION IN THE CLASSROOM Introduction Rudolf Sträßer Theoretical and empirical approaches to classroom interaction Maria G. Bartolini Bussi Theoretical perspectives on interaction in the mathematics classroom Heinrich Bauersfeld TABLE OF CONTENTS 5. PSYCHOLOGY OF MATHEMATICAL THINKING Introduction Roland W. Scholz The interaction between the formal, the algorithmic, and the intuitive components in a mathematical activity Efraim Fischbein From Piaget's constructivism to semantic network theory: Applications to mathematics education - A microanalysis Gerhard Steiner The Sociohistorical School and the acquisition of mathematics Joachim Lompscher Action-theoretic and phenomenological approaches to research in mathematics education: Studies of continually developing experts Richard Lesh and Anthony E. Kelly VIII 147 159 171 177 189 201 213 225 231 247 263 277 287 291 6. DIFFERENTIAL DIDACTICS Introduction Roland W. Scholz Mathematically retarded and gifted students Jens Holger Lorenz 4. TECHNOLOGY AND MATHEMATICS EDUCATION Introduction Bernard Winkelmann The role of programming: Towards experimental mathematics Rosamund Sutherland Computer environments for the learning of mathematics David Tall The role of cognitive tools in mathematics education Tommy Dreyfus Intelligent tutorial systems Gerhard Holland Working in small groups: A learning situation? Colette Laborde Mathematics classroom language: Form, function and force David Pimm TABLE OF CONTENTS 7. HISTORY AND EPISTEMOLOGY OF MATHEMATICS AND MATHEMATICS EDUCATION Introduction Rolf Biehler The philosophy of mathematics and the didactics of mathematics Paul Ernest The human subject in mathematics education and in the history of mathematics Michael Otte and Falk Seeger Mathematics in society Mogens Niss The representational roles of technology in connecting mathematics with authentic experience James J. Kaput LIST OF AUTHORS SUBJECT INDEX IX Should girls and boys be taught differently? Gila Hanna From "mathematics for some" to "mathematics for all" Zalman Usiskin 303 315 8. CULTURAL FRAMING OF TEACHING AND LEARNING MATHEMATICS Introduction Rudolf Sträßer Comparative international research in mathematics education David Robitaille and Cynthia Nicol Cultural influences on mathematics teaching: The ambiguous role of applications in nineteenth-century Germany Hans Niels Jahnke Mathematics and ideology Richard Noss Cultural framing of mathematics teaching and learning Ubiratan D'Ambrosio 399 403 415 431 443 457 461 327 335 351 367 379 PREFACE DIDACTICS OF MATHEMATICS AS A SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINE Since the work of the International Commission for Mathematics Instruction (ICMI) at the beginning of this century, nobody can challenge the fact that scientific work has been done in the field of teaching and learning mathe- matics. This research work has been carried out by mathematicians, psy- chologists, educational scientists, mathematics teacher trainers, and mathe- matics teachers themselves. However, scientific communication on these is- sues long remained in its infancy, particularly on an international level; much work was done in isolation; and it was rare to find people who con- sidered that they belonged to a separate scientific discipline, independent from mathematics or educational science. In the late 1960s, a societal debate on the values and organization of a large number of industrialized countries (such as Germany, France, and the United States of America) stimulated a new concern for education and for the related educational sciences. In the 1970s and 1980s, these develop- ments led to a certain breakthrough for research in mathematics education. The revival of international organizations such as ICMI and regular global conferences known as ICMEs (since 1969) has led to the formation of an international community of mathematics educators. We call the scientific discipline related to this research and the research-based development work didactics of mathematics – a notion that is common at least in German- and French-speaking countries and has become increasingly popular in the English-speaking world. Didactics of mathematics certainly exists as a dis- cipline, at least in a social sense, as can be seen from journals, research and doctorate programs, scientific organizations, and conferences. However, di- dactics of mathematics is fairly young compared to other sciences such as mathematics or psychology. As a fairly young discipline, its system of ob- jects, methodologies, and criteria for valid knowledge exhibits more vari- 1 ability and less consensus. Its role among other sciences at the university is still disputed. This book has been written for the international scientific community of researchers in mathematics education. It provides a state-of-the-art portrait of a new branch of science. The reader will find a structured sample of orig- inal contributions from researchers in the field of didactics of mathematics. The book will be of interest to all researchers in the field. However, mathematics educators who are interested in the theory of their practice and teacher trainers will also appreciate this survey and the diverse stimulations and reflections it provides. Prospective and practicing teachers of mathemat- ics will find a variety of interesting spotlights on their practice that focus on different age groups and ability ranges among their students. In addition to persons directly engaged in mathematics education, the book as a whole and/or individual papers should be of interest to researchers from neighbor- ing disciplines, such as mathematics, general education, educational psy- chology, and cognitive science. The basic idea was to start from a general perspective on didactics of mathematics, to identify certain subdisciplines, and to suggest an overall structure of its field of research. This book should provide a structured view, or a "topology," of the breadth and variety of current research in di- dactics of mathematics by presenting authentic and vivid contributions of individual authors on their current research in certain subdisciplines. The subdisciplines are represented by the chapters of this book. The volume provides a sample of 30 contributions from 10 countries. The authors were asked to present an example of their research in a way that would also make the broader research fields represented by the individual contributions ac- cessible for other colleagues in didactics of mathematics. We use chapter introductions to provide a synthesis and an orientation for the research domain represented by the contributions. The individual contributions are related to the overall idea of the chapter, and the readers' attention is focused on relations and differences between the different pa- pers in a chapter as well as their relation to other chapters. This makes it clear that our aim is not to provide a handbook of didactics of mathematics with authoratively written subchapters synthesizing research from one au- thor's point of view. The organization of the book places more emphasis on a variety and multiplicity of perspectives. It is through the readers' (re-) con- struction and rethinking of our discipline – which we hope to stimulate with this book – that we can contribute to further reflection on and interest in our discipline. The reader will find the following chapters: 2 PREFACE The first five chapters are widely accepted as subdisciplines in the sense of the existence of many cross-references, intensive communication, and a common object of study. The other three "subdisciplines" seem to be less well-structured up to now. We include them because we regard them as im- portant. This may be a certain bias due to our involvement with the IDM and its research tradition. We invented the concept of "Differential Didactics" in analogy to "Differential Psychology" in order to create a focus for research on gender, cultural minorities, and different groups of learners in contrast to what may be considered as "mathematics for all." Didactics of mathematics is an applied area of activity: As in engineering, (applied) psychology, and medicine, the boundary between scientific work and (constructive) practice is – to say the least – "fuzzy." Didactics of math- ematics shares a certain type of (social) problem with the above-mentioned disciplines, namely mathematics education; and it uses a multiplicity of methods. The topics of the first four chapters are often conceived of as practical concerns requiring constructive work, namely, the preparation of curricula and textbooks, the development of programs in teacher education, the formulation of guidelines for classroom interaction and learning, and the development of software. A major recent development has been the attempt to establish a rationalization, theorization, and reflection of these practical activities. Rationalization is understood in the twin sense of reflecting on the rationality of goals as well as improving instrumental efficiency. Sometimes this has led to work that is more comparable to basic science than applied science, because researchers felt that it was necessary to deepen theory and methodological reflection in order to improve our understanding of practical problems. Research on teachers' cognition and on classroom interaction pre- sents an example of this trend. We can also group the chapters into those that are closer to classroom teaching and learning (chapters 1 to 4) and those that reflect and analyze Preparing Mathematics for Students Teacher Education and Research on Teaching Interaction in the Classroom Technology and Mathematics Education Psychology of Mathematical Thinking Differential Didactics History and Epistemology of Mathematics and Mathematics Education Cultural Framing of Teaching and Learning Mathematics PREFACE 3 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. problems of learning, thinking, knowledge, and culture from a more general perspective, though still related to problems in mathematics education (chapters 5 to 8). In the first four chapters, the reader will find papers rang- ing from a mere analytical stance to papers with research-based constructive implications. Chapters 5 to 8 place more emphasis on analytical aspects. Didactics of mathematics has to be structured from a systemic point of view. Even work on subsystems such as the learner or the teacher have to bear in mind the relation to other components. The chapters concentrate mostly on subsystems in this sense. Starting from the knowledge to be taught, namely mathematics, we first try to assemble research on the didac- tical system in a strict sense: the "didactical triangle" of mathematics – teacher – learner. Chapter 1 discusses principles of preparing mathematics for students. Concepts like "didactical transposition," "elementarization" of mathematics, and "didactical engineering" are analyzed. Consequently, the focus of the chapter is on the content of teaching, on knowledge to be taught. Nonetheless, the influence of other factors and institutions is revealed. Chapter 2 concentrates on teacher education and research on teaching. Its link to the preceding chapter obviously is the knowledge to be taught. Its main topic is the knowledge a teacher has or should have, the structure of this knowledge, and ways to influence and develop the teachers' knowledge. Chapter 3 on interaction in the classroom focuses on research that analyzes the complex "social interaction" of teachers and learners in the classroom and in small groups. The analysis of language and discourse in the class- room is an important issue. Chapter 4 on technology and mathematics edu- cation can be viewed from a systematic point of view as "educational tech- nology" including textbooks and assessment schemes. These form an impor- tant product of the didactics of mathematics that is handed on to the practice of teaching. The design and use of such "products" is an important research topic. The focus on problems and potentials of the use of computers and software was chosen because this technology represents a critical issue in the current development of the teaching and learning of mathematics as well as an important research field in didactics. Chapter 5 on psychology of Download 5.72 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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