Credits: All modules are presented by Terezinha Nunes (University of Oxford) except Module 0 presented by Gabriel Stylianides & Louise Matthews (University of Oxford). All videos are filmed by Miguel Mocho (Mocho Cinematic) with a contribution from The Open University.
General Introduction
This unit was designed to highlight moments in the path that, as a psychologist, I followed as I became more engaged with how children learn mathematics. This path starts with the encounter with findings from my own research that challenged conceptions of ability and pedagogy that were predominant at the time, and that I espoused. There were no theories in psychology that helped me to understand the within-individual differences described in the work on street and school mathematics, first published in Portuguese in 1982, but I found some direction in the work of Ubiratan d'Ambrosio and Gérard Vergnaud when I attended ICME in 1984 in Adelaide, Australia. My personal trajectory was hugely influenced by what I learned there and in many subsequent PME meetings.
A theme that emerges at every module is the cultural nature of mathematics and the difficulties of trying to coordinate the idea of logical invariants with culture. Over the four decades during which I have been working on how children learn mathematics. Freudenthal’s ideas and the work of researchers from the Freudenthal Institute have helped me to understand that children learn mathematics as use actions schemas that capture invariants in the situations that they mathematize and learn to use the mathematical tools for representing and processing information. This is the short version of the story and I hope it will motivate you to watch the modules and find out about the full story.
Important note: As someone who does not have English as my first language, I was aware of the need to speak at a pace that makes it possible for non-native speakers to follow the modules. I advise native speakers to play the videos at speed 1.2, which does not distort the sound but creates a better experience for native speakers.
Bibliography
Official citation for the 2017 Felix Klein ICMI Award
https://www.mathunion.org/icmi/awards/hans-freudenthal-award/2017-hans-freudenthal-award
Bibliography
Carraher, T. N., Carraher, D. W., & Schliemann, A. D. (1985). Mathematics in the streets and in schools. British Journal of Developmental psychology, 3(1), 21-29.
Carraher, T. N. & Schliemann, A. D. (1985). Computation routines prescribed by schools: Help or hindrance? Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 16, 1, 37-44. d'Ambrosio, U. (1985). Ethnomathematics and its place in the history and pedagogy of mathematics. For the Learning of Mathematics, 5(1), 44-48.
Freudenthal, H. (1983). Didactical Phenomenology of Mathematical Structures. Dordrecht: D. Reidel.
Gay, J., & Cole, M. (1967). The New Mathematics and an Old Culture. A Study of Learning among the Kpelle of Liberia. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
Nunes, T., Schliemann, A. D., & Carraher, D. W. (1993). Street Mathematics and School Mathematics. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Vergnaud, G. (1997). The nature of mathematical concepts. In T. Nunes & P. Bryant (Eds.), Learning and Teaching Mathematics. An International Perspective (pp. 1-28). Hove (UK): Psychology Press.
Arithmetic is visible; the reasoning that lies beneath arithmetic is not. Module 2 focuses on proportional reasoning, a form of quantitative reasoning considered by developmental psychologists Piaget and Inhelder as a hallmark of advanced cognitive development and by mathematics educators a challenge for many secondary school students. The module focuses on proportional reasoning used outside school. I suggest that the origins of multiplicative (proportional) reasoning are not in repeated addition, but in the action schema of one-to-many correspondence, which children and adults use in many everyday activities. Drawing on Vergnaud’s ideas, I explore the forms of reasoning about proportions that emerge without schooling and speculate about the role of schooling in promoting proportional reasoning.
Bibliography
Brink, J. V. D., & Streefland, L. (1979). Young Children (6-8): Ratio and Proportion. Educational Studies in Mathematics, 10, 403-420.
Carraher, T. Nunes. (1986). From drawings to buildings: Working with mathematical scales. International Journal of Behavioral Development, 9, 527-544.
Freudenthal, H. (1968). Why to Teach Mathematics So as to Be Useful. Educational Studies in Mathematics, 1, 3-8.
Inhelder, B., & Piaget, J. (1958). The growth of logical thinking from childhood to adolescence. New York: Basic books.
Nunes, T., & Bryant, P. (1996). Children Doing Mathematics. Oxford: Blackwell.
Nunes, T., Schliemann, A. D., & Carraher, D. W. (1993). Street Mathematics and School Mathematics. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Schliemann, A. D. & Nunes, T. (1990) A situated scheme of proportionality. British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 8, 259-268.
Vergnaud, G. (1983). Multiplicative structures. In R. Lesh & M. Landau (Eds.), Acquisition of mathematics concepts and processes (pp. 128-175). London: Academic Press.
Bibliography
Brink, J. V. D., & Streefland, L. (1979). Young Children (6-8): Ratio and Proportion. Educational Studies in Mathematics, 10, 403-420.
de Corte, E., Greer, B., & Verschaffel, L. (2000). Making sense of word problems: CRC Press.
Guedj, D. (1998). Numbers. A universal language. London: Thame and Hudson.
Hoyles, C., Noss, R., & Pozzi, S. (1999). Mathematising in practice. In C. Hoyles, C. Morgan, & G. Woodhouse (Eds.), Rethinking the mathematics curriculum (Vol. 10, pp. 48-62). London: Falmer Press.
Luria, A. R. (1973). The working brain. An introduction to neuropsychology. Harmondsworth (UK): Penguin. Nunes, T. (2004). Teaching Mathematics to Deaf Children. London: Wiley/Blackwell (translated into Greek).
Nunes, T. (2002). The role of systems of signs in reasoning. In T. Brown & L. Smith (Eds.), Reductionism and the Development of Knowledge (pp. 133-158). Mawah (NJ): Lawrence Erlbaum.
Nunes, T., Bryant, P., Gottardis, L., Terlektsi, M.-E., & Evans, D. (2015). Can we really teach problem solving in primary school? Mathematics Teaching, 246, 44-48.
Thompson, P. W. (1993). Quantitative Reasoning, Complexity, and Additive Structures. Educational Studies in Mathematics, 3, 165-208.
Verschaffel, L., & De Corte, E. (1993). A decade of research on word problem solving in Leuven: Theoretical, methodological, and practical outcomes. Educational Psychology Review, 5(3), 239-256. doi:10.1007/BF01323046
Bibliography
Nunes, T., & Bryant, P. (1996). Children Doing Mathematics. Oxford: Blackwell.
Nunes, T., & Bryant, P. (2022). Using Mathematics to Understand the World. How Culture Promotes Children's Mathematics. London: Taylor & Francis.
Nunes, T., & Bryant, P. (2022). Number systems as models of quantitative relations. In G. K. Akar, İ. Ö. Zembat, S. Arslan, & P. W. Thompson (Eds.), Quantitative reasoning in science and mathematics education (pp. 71-106): Springer.