Contemporary concerns in mathematics education recognize that in the increasingly technological and globalized world, with concomitant change in population demographics (e.g. immigration, urbanization) and a change in the status of languages (e.g. English as a dominant language of science and technology) multilingualism in classrooms is a norm rather than an exception. Shifts in perspective also view language not simply as an instrument for cognition with all learners equipped with this instrument in service of learning, although clearly in the classroom that remains of importance. Rather, it is now also being acknowledged that language use is inherently political, so that the language that gets official recognition in the classroom is invariably the language of the powerful elite, or the dominant societal language, or in the case of post-colonial contexts the language of the colonisers. From this socio-political role of language in learning quite different issues arise for teaching, learning and curriculum for linguistically marginalized learners than that of cognition (e.g. immigrants, second language learners, other). Policies on language in education are being considered and re-considered with specific reference to mathematics teaching and learning. Given the policy environment, globally the proposed publication is timely. This edited collection draws on recent, emerging insights and understandings about the approaches to improving policy and practice in mathematics education and mathematics teacher education in multilingual settings. It presents, and discusses critically, examples of work from a range of contexts and uses these examples to draw out key issues for research in education in language diverse settings including teaching, learning, curriculum and fit these with appropriate policy and equity approaches. With contributions from all over the world, especially novice researchers in low income countries, this book is a valuable resource for courses in Mathematics Education and related social sciences both at the graduate and undergraduate levels, as well as for students of international development.
A subtractive language environment is argued as a key factor in the production of high failure rates in schooling across the country (e.g. Alexander, 1997).7 Pedagogically the demands made of so many young children and their teachers ...
This collection explores the complex issues that arise in multilingual mathematics classrooms in Europe, South Asia, North America and Australia.
How many T-shirts does Nicholas the organizer [from the story] put in one roll? How many? Show me with your hands. How many are there? Are there 5? I'm seeing some 5s. Are there 10? Are there more? Portia, how many are there in the roll ...
Within the mathematics education research literature, Pimm ( 1987 ), Freudenthal ( 1991 ) and many others have advocated a careful transition from everyday language to the technical language of mathematics as an important teaching ...
This book brings together the first book collection of African research in mathematics education in multilingual societies and chronicles current research in different linguistic contexts across the African continent, (including Algeria, ...
This book will appeal to all teachers of ELLs, teacher educators and researchers of language acquisition more broadly. This volume is part of a set of four edited books focused on teaching the key content areas to English language learners.
Developing a perspective on multiplicity in the study of language in mathematics classrooms / Candia Morgan, Núria Planas and Marcus Schütte -- Language, paralinguistic phenomena and the (same-old) mathematics register / David Pimm -- ...
Resources for Teaching Mathematics in Bilingual Classrooms
This series offers teachers a practical support, complete with abundant rubrics and detailed plans for teaching math vocabulary!" —Renee Peoples, Teacher Swain County Schools, Bryson City, NC
This volume explores the nature of discourse in secondary and upper elementary mathematics and science classrooms.