<!doctype html public "-//W3C//DTD W3 HTML//EN">
<html><head><style type="text/css"><!--
blockquote, dl, ul, ol, li { padding-top: 0 ; padding-bottom: 0 }
--></style><title>ICMI News 16: February 2011</title></head><body>
<div><br></div>
<div>ICMI News 16: February 2011<br>
A Bimonthly Email Newsletter from the ICMI-International Commission on
Mathematical Instruction</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>Editor: Jaime Carvalho e Silva, Dep. Matematica, Universidade de
Coimbra, Portugal<br>
<br>
CONTENTS<br>
</div>
<div>1. Editorial: 2013 is The Year of Mathematics of Planet
Earth</div>
<div>2. UNESCO: The challenges of mathematics education in basic
education</div>
<div>3. New permanent Office of IMU/ICMI/CDC</div>
<div>4. Meeting of the ICMI Executive Committee</div>
<div>5. Alicia Villar (Uruguay)</div>
<div>6. First announcement of HPM 2012</div>
<div>7. Changes to the HPM newsletter</div>
<div>8. Calendar of Events of Interest to the ICMI Community</div>
<div>9. ICMI-Study conference proceedings "Gender and mathematics
education"</div>
<div>10. Subscribing to ICMI News</div>
<div><br></div>
<div
>--------------------------------------------------------------------<span
></span>----</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>1. Editorial: 2013 is The Year of Mathematics of Planet
Earth</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>Our planet suffers from excessive use of its natural resources,
from desertification, from pollution of the earth and the oceans. The
above causes hunger and affects public health, life expectancy, and
bio-diversity. Climate change, whether man made or not, is already
causing extreme events and disasters. Man made systems, like
transportations flows, health systems, or financial organization, are
becoming more and more complex and sometimes run out of control. These
phenomena have raised public awareness and influence the agenda of
governments, of international bodies, and of science policy
leaders.</div>
<div>It is clear that addressing the above issues should start with
scientific research and advanced technological development. Every
high-school student understands that the solutions require study and
research in the exact sciences like chemistry, physics and geology, in
the life sciences like epidemiology, genetics and zoology, and in
engineering. It is not clear whether every high-school student is
aware that beyond all of it there is mathematics.<br>
The high-school teachers need to demonstrate that there is
mathematical modeling and algorithms behind water resource management
and hydrological forecasting; behind energy generation, preservation
and allocation; behind weather prediction, fluid dynamics, forecasting
extreme events (tsunamis, hurricanes, earthquakes) and risk
management; behind analyzing complex systems (like transportation and
finance); behind understanding epidemic spread and virus infections;
and behind ecological conservation. Curriculum planning should take
this into consideration, and policy makers should be strongly aware of
it.</div>
<div>The mathematics behind our responses includes a wide spectrum of
mathematical fields, from complex analysis to numerical analysis to
stochastics, statistics, probability, ergodic theory, game theory,
catastrophe theory, projective geometry, algebra, and scientific
computing.</div>
<div>Therefore the International Mathematical Union declared the year
2013 as The Year of Mathematics of Planet Earth (MPE). In terms
of education systems this means presenting posters and models in
schools, special issues of mathematical magazines, interactive web
activities, and teachers conferences on the theme. In terms of
mathematics education national societies 2013 should be a time of
presenting to the public and creating platforms for financing
mathematical programmes. In terms of ICMI, it can mean special
round tables at our conferences, curriculum development via study
groups, interdisciplinary conferences jointly organized with other
mathematical and science and science education societies and other
organizations. We need to remain aware that effective Mathematics and
Mathematics Education are necessary in order to protect our planet,
our lives, and our futures.</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>Mina Teicher, Vice-President of ICMI,
teicher@macs.biu.ac.il</div>
<div><br>
---------------------------------------------------------------------<span
></span>---</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>2. UNESCO: The challenges of mathematics education in basic
education</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>"Les défis de l'enseignement des mathématiques dans
l'éducation de base"</div>
<div><b><br></b></div>
<div>In 2009, as ICMI president,<b> Michèle Artigue</b> was asked to
take part in a meeting of experts organized by UNESCO in Paris about
science and mathematics education policies, and then on the basis of
the conclusions of this meeting to prepare a document on the
challenges of mathematics education in basic education to be published
and disseminated by UNESCO together with a parallel document
addressing the challenges of scientific education. This second
document was written by<b> Charles Ryan,</b> University of Winchester
UK.</div>
<div>The two documents have just been concluded but are not yet
available for distribution.</div>
<div>In line with the declaration from the World Conference in Science
held in Budapest in 1999, they consider that anyone should have access
to a scientific education of quality, and also that such an education
has a decisive contribution to offer to the realization of the
Millenium Goals adopted by the UN in 2000. Mathematics education is
here considered an essential component of scientific education at
large, and the connections to be established between education in
mathematics and in science are emphasized in the two documents which
share a common introduction and structure.</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>The two documents were presented in a seminar held in Paris,
January 19, at the UNESCO headquarters and presided by<b> Georges
Haddad</b>, the director of the Education Research & Foresigh Team
of UNESCO, and a former director of the Division of Higher Education.
A number of UNESCO staff and other interested public were
present.</div>
<div>UNESCO presented these documents as a response to the world need
of scientists able of imagining futures of which we can now just have
a glimpse, but also of our need to understand the challenges of
health, environment, energy, development so that all the people are
able to understand these challenges and that the debate is not
reserved to specialists.</div>
<div>UNESCO considers it important to have a scientific education of
quality for all, and this includes mathematics education and
technological education.</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>The mathematics document presents first the agreed vision on the
significance of a mathematics education of quality, emphasizing that
it should be faithful to mathematics, both in its content and
practices, raise students' interest towards the discipline and develop
students' confidence in their mathematical capacities. It should thus
enable students to understand that mathematics is part of a long
history combined with the history of humanity; that mathematics is not
a fixed corpus of knowledge but, on the contrary, a living and
expanding science, whose development nourishes that of other
scientific fields and is nourished by them in return.</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>The current published version of the document is in French. An
English translation has been prepared by the ICMI Executive Committee
and should be soon published by UNESCO which also takes in charge the
preparation of a Spanish version. An Italian translation is being
prepared under the responsibility of the Italian Mathematical Union
and will be published by it. UNESCO is open to translation in any
other language, and the different versions will be made accessible on
the ICMI website. ICMI sincerely hopes that the publication of this
document and its dissemination will productively support reflection
and action among all those who can contribute to reaching the goal of
quality mathematics education for all.</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>We will post a note in this newsletter when the documents are
available in print or on the web.</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>Jaime Carvalho e Silva, Secretary-General of ICMI,
jaimecs@mat.uc.pt</div>
<div><br></div>
<div
>--------------------------------------------------------------------<span
></span>----</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>3. New permanent Office of IMU/ICMI/CDC</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>February 1, 2011 was a great day for IMU and ICMI and CDC. After
a lengthy but very productive process, we are all going to have a
permanent office and will not need any more to carry all the papers
and documents all over the world from the office of one President or
Secretary General to the next one. IMU General Assembly decided to
accept the offer of the Weierstrass Institute (WIAS) in Berlin and now
we have a brand new headquarters with permanent staff working on it: 5
positions have been opened and are being filled.</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>In the Official Opening Ceremony of the Permanent IMU Secretariat
were present Dr. Georg Schütte, State Secretary of the German
Federal Ministry of Education and Research, a representative of Prof.
Dr. E. Jürgen Zöllner, Berlin Senator for Education, Science and
Research, Prof. Dr. Ingrid Daubechies, President of the International
Mathematical Union (IMU) , Prof. Dr. Christian Bär, President of the
German Mathematical Society (DMV), Prof. Dr. Jürgen Sprekels,
Director of WIAS and Prof. Dr. Martin Grötschel, IMU Secretary, Vice
President of the Zuse Institute Berlin. This was a very significant
ceremony for the IMU activities, as well as its two main committees
ICMI and CDC.</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>You can see some of the news about the opening ceremony
here:</div>
<div><br></div>
<div
>http://www.tagesspiegel.de/wissen/hauptstadt-der-mathematik/3788532.<span
></span>html</div>
<div
>http://www.tagesspiegel.de/wissen/warten-auf-den-wow-moment/3791920.<span
></span>html</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>We will inform everybody of the new way of contacting ICMI and
how all matters will be handled in this new structure, as soon as the
new procedures are implemented.</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>Jaime Carvalho e Silva, Secretary-General of ICMI,
jaimecs@mat.uc.pt</div>
<div><br></div>
<div
>--------------------------------------------------------------------<span
></span>----</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>4. Meeting of the ICMI Executive Committee</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>The 2010-2012 Executive Committee of ICMI is going to have its
second meeting in Beijing later this month. All ICMI activities will
be reviewed, from ICMI Studies to cooperation with UNESCO, from the
process of choosing the site for ICME-13 (2016) to the current status
of the organization of ICME-12, from the discussion of the metrics
"imposed" in a lot of countries to math journals to the
definition of guidelines for ICMI Studies, from the demand of new
Affiliate organizations to the the status of the ICMI regional
conferences or the launching of new projects. A summary of the
conclusions will be published in another newsletter.</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>Jaime Carvalho e Silva, Secretary-General of ICMI,
jaimecs@mat.uc.pt</div>
<div><br></div>
<div
>--------------------------------------------------------------------<span
></span>----</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>5. Alicia Villar (Uruguay)</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>It is with great sadness that we announce the death of Prof. Dra.
Alicia Villar from Uruguay that was, from 1999 to 2003, vice-president
of IACME-CIAEM, the Interamerican Committee on Mathematics Education,
an organization affiliated to ICMI.</div>
<div>She died on February 4, 2011. She was the founder and first
President of SEMUR-Sociedad de Educación Matemática Uruguaya. The
president of SEMUR, Prof. Etda Rodríguez, "recalls the good
moments in which Alicia did so much for Mathematics Education in our
country". Luis Balbueña, Secretary General of the Iberoamerican
Federation of Societies of Mathematics Education, says that Alicia was
a woman that put vehemence in all she was doing.</div>
<div>Alicia Villar Icasuriaga had a PhD in Methodology and Didactics
of Mathematics and was preparing teachers of Mathematics at the
Instituto de Profesores "Artigas" (IPA), Montevideo,
Uruguay.</div>
<div>Beyond the vice-presidency of IACME-CIAEM she had an intensive
international activity. She was the organizer of the Xth meeting of
IACME that took place in 1999 in Maldonado (Urguay), she was a
vice-president of the International Committee that organizes the
meetings "Didática da Matemática do Cone Sul" including
countries from the south cone of South America; she was the main
organizer of the first such meeting that took place in Montevideo at
the Instituto de Professores "Artigas", on the 24th and 25th
of April of 1992.</div>
<div>She was a member of the team that organized TSG 18: Problem
solving in mathematics education in ICME-10. She was a member of the
International Program Committee of the 11th International Conference
of The Mathematics Education into the 21st Century Project that is
going to take place in September 11-17, 2011 in Rhodes University,
Grahamstown, South Africa.</div>
<div>Maria Salett Biembengut (Brasil), a former president of
IACME-CIAEM wrote that "My dear Alicia dedicated part of her
professional life to Mathematics Education. She was always present in
international events and was an intrepid advocate of IACEM-CIEM. We
will feel sorrow for her."</div>
<div><br>
Some of her works include:<br>
'Solving mathematical and logical problems with Lewis Carroll',
Números, No. 34, 39-45 (1998).<br>
'Using Uruguayan architecture to teach geometry', Aust. Math. Teach.
53, No. 2, 24-26 (1997).<br>
'Mathematics and the World Soccer Championship. Didactical Module',
First International Congress of Ethnomathematics (ICEM), Granada,
Spain, 1998.</div>
<div>' "An original walk"(through the city of Montevideo)', First
International Congress of Ethnomathematics (ICEM), Granada, Spain,
1998.</div>
<div><br></div>
<div><br></div>
<div>Jaime Carvalho e Silva, Secretary-General of ICMI,
jaimecs@mat.uc.pt</div>
<div>(we thank Maria Salett Biembengut for her help in writing this
small note)</div>
<div
>--------------------------------------------------------------------<span
></span>----</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>6. First announcement of HPM 2012</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>HPM 2012 History and Pedagogy of Mathematics<br>
The HPM Satellite Meeting of ICME-12<br>
16-20 July 2012, Daejeon (Korea)</div>
<div><br>
1. Aim and focus<br>
The HPM 2012 is the eighth quadrennial meeting of the International
Study Group on the Relations between the History and Pedagogy of
Mathematics (the HPM Group), affiliated to ICMI. It is a satellite
meeting of the corresponding ICME (International Congress on
Mathematical Education) and is scheduled close to ICME. These
quadrennial meetings are a major activity of HPM, to bring those
together who are interested in the relation between the history of
mathematics and mathematics education such as:<br>
<br>
* Researchers in mathematics education, and its
relation to the history of mathematics;<br>
* Mathematics teachers at all levels who are eager
to get insights on how the history of mathematics may be integrated
into teaching and help students to learn mathematics;<br>
* Historians of mathematics, who wish to talk about
their research;<br>
* Mathematicians, who want to learn about new
possibilities to teach their discipline;<br>
* All those with an interest in the history of
mathematics and pedagogy.</div>
<div><br>
2. Main themes<br>
The HPM 2012 is a place where mathematicians, educators, historians,
researchers and students can make presentations and participate in
discussions. The programme and activities are structured around the
following main seven themes:<br>
1. Theoretical and/or conceptual frameworks for integrating history in
mathematics education;<br>
2. History and epistemology implemented in mathematics education:
classroom experiments & teaching materials;<br>
3. Original sources in the classroom, and their educational
effects;<br>
4. Mathematics and its relation to science, technology and the arts:
historical issues and educational implications;<br>
5. Cultures and mathematics;<br>
6. Topics in the history of mathematics education;<br>
7. Mathematics from Eastern Asia.<br>
<br>
3. Activities during HPM 2012<br>
During HPM 2012 there will be<br>
<br>
* one-hour plenary lectures on each of the seven
main themes<br>
* two one-hour panel discussions<br>
* parallel sessions of 25-minute oral
presentations, followed by 5-minute discussions<br>
* poster exhibitions with discussion sessions</div>
<div> * exhibitions of books and other didactical
material</div>
<div><br>
4. Invited speakers<br>
<br>
* Tinne Hoff Kjeldsen (Denmark): "Uses of history
for the learning of and about mathematics: towards a theoretical
framework for integrating history of mathematics in mathematics
education."</div>
<div> * Tsang-Yi Lin (Taiwan): "Using History of
Mathematics in High School Classroom: Some Experiments in
Taiwan."<br>
* Janet Barnett (USA): "Bottled at the Source:
The Design and Implementation of Classroom Projects for Learning
Mathematics via Primary Historical Sources."</div>
<div> * Dominique Tournès (France): "Mathematics
of the 19th century engineers: methods and instruments."<br>
* Ubiratan d'Ambrosio (Brazil): "Mind and Hand:
the complexity and diversity of mathematics in different cultural
environments."<br>
* Johan Prytz (Sweden): "Social structures in
mathematics education. Researching the history of mathematics
education with theories and methods from sociology of
education."<br>
* Sung Sa Hong (Korea): "Theory of Equations in
the history of Chosun Mathematics."<br>
<br>
5. Time and place<br>
HPM 2012 will be held from Monday 16 July to Friday 20 July 2012 in
Daejeon, Korea.</div>
<div>Sessions will be held on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
with a cultural tour on Wednesday.<br>
ICME-12 will be held from Monday 9 July to Sunday 15 July 2012 in
Seoul, Korea. Its scientific program includes oral presentations and
activities on the history and pedagogy on mathematics and on the
history of mathematical teaching. It is planned that these activities
will take place in the end of this meeting and that a special price
for inscriptions will be granted to those who will participate to both
ICME-12 and HPM 2012.<br>
<br>
6. Official Languages<br>
The official languages are English and Korean.<br>
More specifically:<br>
-All plenary talks and panel discussions will be in English with
simultaneous translation if possible.<br>
-Oral presentations will be given in either English, or Korean. For
presentations in Korean a second set of transparencies should be,
utilizing either two projectors and screens, or two power point
computers.<br>
<br>
7. Submission of proposals<br>
ABSTRACTS<br>
30 June 2011: deadline for submitting Abstracts of proposals for all
types of activities.</div>
<div>31 August 2011: notification of acceptance or not of the
submitted proposals.</div>
<div><br>
9. The web site</div>
<div>Making known the HPM 2012 in various countries is a major task to
be realized by the SPC. To this end, a web site is available at
http://www.hpm2012.org.<br>
This is going to be a very efficient tool to make known the HPM 2012
worldwide, allowing online registration etc.<br>
<br>
10. Proceedings<br>
Publishing the Proceedings of HPM 2012 is also a major task, and will
be available in the meeting.<br>
Each submitted full text for an oral presentation or a workshop will
be reviewed by members of the SPC at the usual international
standards.<br>
More details on the size of the texts, the format guidelines will be
announced in due course from the HPM 2012 and HPM websites,
respectively;<br>
http://www.hpm2012.org<br>
http://www.clab.edc.uoc.gr/hpm/.<br>
<br>
FULL TEXTS<br>
30 November 2011: deadline for submitting full texts for all types of
activities.<br>
31 January 2012: Notification of acceptance or not of the submitted
texts.<br>
<br>
11. Registration fee<br>
Early registration (before 5 February 2012): 180$ (students 90$)<br>
Late registration (From 6 February until 31 May 2012): 230$ (students
130$)<br>
Registration after 31 may 2012, or on the spot: 270$ (students
160$)<br>
<br>
12. Contact<br>
For further information, please contact:<br>
- Evelyne Barbin, evelyne.barbin@wanadoo.fr<br>
- Sunwook Hwang, shwang@ssu.ac.kr<br>
- Sangki Choi, schoi@konkuk.ac.kr<br>
- Constantinos Tzanakis, tzanakis@edc.uoc.gr</div>
<div><br></div>
<div
>--------------------------------------------------------------------<span
></span>----</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>7. Changes to the HPM newsletter</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>There are a few important changes to the HPM Newsletter
now.</div>
<div>Chris Weeks is stepping down as co-editor after working on the
newsletter since 2004. With his knowledge of the field and the group,
he has been essential to the newsletter for more than six years. He is
being replaced by no less than three new co-editors, which is a clear
suggestion of his value to the HPM community.</div>
<div>The new newsletter co-editors are Kathy Clark, Snezana Lawrence
and Helder Pinto, whom will be presented more fully in time.</div>
<div>The other important change is that we are publishing the
newsletter online as a<u> supplement</u> to the paper version. The
version online is available on the website<u>
http://grouphpm.wordpress.com/</u>.</div>
<div><br>
There will be new articles online every month, and these articles will
go into the issues that will be published three times a year as
before.<br>
The online version offers opportunities for publishing content more
quickly and to have feedback on articles - as well as making it even
simpler for new people to find the HPM group. Any suggestions and
input is welcome.</div>
<div>There is available, right now, the following items:</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>- Novembertagung 2010: A conference for History of Mathematics
Ph.D. students;</div>
<div>- Special issue of Mathematics in School;</div>
<div>- First announcement HPM 2012;</div>
<div>- Announcement Second International Conference on the History of
Mathematics Education;</div>
<div>- BSHM Bulletin Volume 25 Number 3 (2010);</div>
<div>- More on the Kenneth O. May prize;</div>
<div>- Have you read these?</div>
<div> <br>
All recent newsletters are at</div>
<div><u>http://www.clab.edc.uoc.gr/HPM/NewsLetters.htm</u></div>
<div> <br>
Please send contributions to the HPM Newsletter 76 to Bjørn Smestad
(Bjorn.Smestad@lui.hio.no) before February 12th, 2011. Both articles,
notices, book reviews and announcements of events are very welcome, as
well as information for the "Have you read these?" and
"Have you been there?" sections.<br>
</div>
<div>We hope that the newsletter and its version online are
useful!<br>
</div>
<div>Helder Pinto, hbmpinto1981@gmail.com</div>
<div><br></div>
<div
>--------------------------------------------------------------------<span
></span>----</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>8. Calendar of Events of Interest to the ICMI Community</div>
<div><br>
4th International Conference on Science and Mathematics Education in
Developing Countries,</div>
<div>Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 23-25 February 2011<br>
http://www.cambmathsociety.org/conf/HOME.html</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>Conference on Research in Undergraduate Mathematics
Education,</div>
<div>February 24, - February 27, 2011, Portland, Oregon, USA<br>
http://sigmaa.maa.org/rume/crume2011/Home.html</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>History of European Universities. Challenges and
transformations,</div>
<div>Lisbon, Portugal, April 18-20, 2011</div>
<div
>http://centenario.ul.pt/conferencias/history-of-european-universities</div
>
<div><br></div>
<div>XIII CIAEM - Inter-American Conference on Mathematics
Education</div>
<div>Recife, Brasil, June 26-30, 2011.</div>
<div>http://www.ciaem-iacme.org/</div>
<div><br>
ICTMT10 - 10th International Conference on Technology in Mathematics
Teaching</div>
<div>University of Portsmouth, July 5-8, 2011</div>
<div>http://www.ictmt10.org/<br>
<br>
PME 35 - CONFERENCE OF THE INTERNATIONAL GROUP FOR THE PSYCHOLOGY OF
MATHEMATICS EDUCATION<br>
Ankara, Turkey, July 10-15, 2011</div>
<div>http://www.arber.com.tr/pme35.org/</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>ICTMA 15: 15th International Conference on the Teaching of
Mathematical Modelling and Applications</div>
<div>Melbourne, Australia, July 14-19, 2011</div>
<div>http://www.ictma15.edu.au/</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>FAMA - Family Math for adult learners international conference:
"Family and communities in and out of the classroom: ways to
improve mathematics' achievement", Barcelona, Spain, July 23,
2011<br>
http://www.mathforlive.net/fama_Conference.php</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>CIEAEM 63: "Facilitating access and participation -
Mathematical practices inside and outside the classroom" /
"Faciliter l'accès et la participation - Les pratiques
mathématiques à l'intérieur et à l'extérieur de la
classe",</div>
<div>University of Barcelona, Spain, July 24 - July 29, 2011</div>
<div>http://www.cieaem.net/</div>
<div><br>
SEMT 11 - SYMPOSIUM ON ELEMENTARY MATHS TEACHING<br>
Prague, Czech Republic, August 21-26, 2011<br>
http://kmdm.pedf.cuni.cz/Default.aspx?PorZobr=7&PolozkaID=-1&<span
></span>ClanekID=267</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>16e Ecole d'été de didactique des mathématiques -
Association pour la Recherche en Didactique des Mathématiques,</div>
<div>Carcassonne (Aude), France, August 21-28, 2011</div>
<div>http://www.ardm.eu/contenu/2011-carcassonne</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>The Mathematics Education into the 21st Century Project 11th
International Conference, Turning Dreams into Reality: Transformations
and Paradigm Shifts in Mathematics Education, Rhodes University,
Grahamstown, South Africa, September 11-17, 2011</div>
<div>http://math.unipa.it/%7Egrim/21project.htm</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>ECER 2011 - European Conference on Educational Research,</div>
<div>Berlin, September 13-16, 2011</div>
<div>http://www.eera-ecer.eu/ecer/ecer-2011-berlin/</div>
<div><br>
ICMI Study 21 Conference<br>
São Paulo, Brazil, September 16-20, 2011<br>
http://www.icmi-21.com/</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>ATCM 2011 - 16th Asian Technology Conference of Mathematics,
'Integration of Technology into Mathematics Education-past, present
and future',</div>
<div>Abant Izzet Baysal University, Bolu, Turkey, September 19-23,
2011</div>
<div>http://atcm2011.org/</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>Volcanic DELTA 2011, Eighth Southern Hemisphere Conference on the
Teaching and Learning of Undergraduate Mathematics and
Statistics,</div>
<div>Rotorua, NZ, November 27 - December 2, 2011<br>
http://www.delta2011.co.nz/delta2011/</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>Seventh International Conference on Science, Mathematics &
Technology Education: Transformations through Science, Mathematics and
Technology Education - Towards an Innovative and Sustainable Society,
Muscat, Oman, February 12-15, 2012</div>
<div>d.fisher@smec.curtin.edu.au</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>EMF 2012 - Espace Mathématique Francophone,</div>
<div>Genève, 3-7 Février 2012</div>
<div>http://www.emf2012.unige.ch/</div>
<div><br>
ICME-12 - Twelfth International Congress on Mathematical
Education</div>
<div>Seoul, Korea, July 8-15, 2012</div>
<div>http://www.icme12.org/</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>HPM 2012 History and Pedagogy of Mathematics<br>
The HPM Satellite Meeting of ICME-12</div>
<div>Daejeon (Korea), July 16-20, 2012</div>
<div>http://www.hpm2012.org</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>EARCOME6 - The Sixth East Asia Regional Conference on Mathematics
Education,</div>
<div>Thailand, March, 2013</div>
<div><br></div>
<div
>--------------------------------------------------------------------<span
></span>----</div>
<div><br>
9. ICMI-Study conference proceedings "Gender and mathematics
education"</div>
<div><br></div>
<div><br></div>
<div>A few copies of the ICMI-Study book conference proceedings
"Gender and mathematics education" are available for free
for interested readers.</div>
<div>This conference was held in Hoor, Sweden in October 1993. The
book is divided into plenary addresses, research papers, panel
presentations and working group reports. The collection presents
voices from more than 18 countries.</div>
<div>Reference: Grevholm, B. & Hanna, G. (1995). Gender and
mathematics education, an ICMI Study in Stiftsgården Åkersberg,
Höör, Sweden 1993. Lund: Lund University Press.</div>
<div>Please send an email to<u> Barbro.Grevholm@uia.no</u> if you want
a copy.</div>
<div>You can find a review of this volume here:</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>http://www.awm-math.org/bookreviews/NovDec96.html</div>
<div><br></div>
<div
>--------------------------------------------------------------------<span
></span>----</div>
<div><br></div>
<div><br>
10. SUBSCRIBING TO ICMI News</div>
<div><br>
There are two ways of subscribing to ICMI News:<br>
<br>
1. Click on http://www.mathunion.org/index.php?id=674 with a Web
browser<br>
and go to the "Subscribe" button to subscribe to ICMI News
online.<br>
<br>
2. Send an e-mail to icmi-news-request@mathunion.org with the
Subject-line:<br>
Subject: subscribe<br>
<br>
In both cases you will get an e-mail to confirm your subscription
so<br>
that misuse will be minimized. ICMI will not use the list of ICMI
News<br>
addresses for any purpose other than sending ICMI News, and will
not</div>
<div>make it available to others.<br>
<br>
Previous issues can be seen at:<br>
http://www.mathunion.org/pipermail/icmi-news<br>
<br>
=====================================================================</div
>
</body>
</html>