New Teacher Identity and Regulative Government (e-bog) af McNamara, Olwen
McNamara, Olwen (forfatter)

New Teacher Identity and Regulative Government e-bog

875,33 DKK (inkl. moms 1094,16 DKK)
This book seeks to address the question of how the task of teaching mathematics to young children might be better understood. But rather than starting out with a conception of mathematics derived from the many histories mathematics might claim as its own we centre the analysis instead within the social practices that surround the teaching of the subject to children aged four to eleven in Englis...
E-bog 875,33 DKK
Forfattere McNamara, Olwen (forfatter)
Forlag Springer
Udgivet 30 marts 2006
Genrer Teacher training
Sprog English
Format pdf
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9780387239729
This book seeks to address the question of how the task of teaching mathematics to young children might be better understood. But rather than starting out with a conception of mathematics derived from the many histories mathematics might claim as its own we centre the analysis instead within the social practices that surround the teaching of the subject to children aged four to eleven in English primary schools today. That is, we do not commence with an a priori conception of mathematics and see what people are saying about it. Rather, we start from what people are saying and see where this points. We probe how the desires of society have manifested themselves in a societal decision to teach mathematics and how this decision now shapes that which is called "e;mathematics"e;. We focus on the operation of the noun "e;mathematics"e; and verb "e;mathematical"e; and consider how the meanings of these terms derive from the social domain in which they are being used. This extends and develops a conception of how language intervenes in the task of mathematics education presented elsewhere (Brown, 2001). In this present book however, we have a particular focus on trainee and newly qualified teachers, with a view to pinpointing how this conception of mathematics manifests itself in their evolving practices. We question how such teachers with many years of experience as a pupil in school might now re-orient themselves towards the demands of teaching mathematics in schools.