ABSTRACT

Different communities, speaking different languages, employ different naming systems to describe the events, actions, and interactions of the mathematics classroom. The International Classroom Lexicon Project documented the professional vocabulary available to middle-school mathematics teachers in Australia, Chile, China, the Czech Republic, Finland, France, Germany, Japan, Korea, and the United States. National teams of researchers and experienced teachers used a common set of classroom videos to stimulate recognition of familiar terms describing aspects of the mathematics classroom. This book details the existing professional vocabulary in each international community by which mathematics teachers conceptualise their practice, and explores the characteristics, structures, and distinctive features of each national lexicon. This book has the potential to enrich the professional vocabulary of mathematics teachers around the world by providing access to sophisticated classroom practices named by teachers in different countries.

This one volume offers separate, individual lexicons developed from empirical research, the capacity to juxtapose such lexicons, and an unmatched opportunity to highlight the cultural, historical, and linguistic bases of teachers' professional language.

chapter 2|22 pages

Naming aspects of teaching practice

Describing and analysing a lexicon of mathematics teachers in Australia

chapter 4|16 pages

What we can name in the classroom

A Chilean lexicon of middle-school mathematics teachers

chapter 7|16 pages

Chinese Lexicon

chapter 10|12 pages

The Finnish mathematics teachers' lexicon

A focus on organisation and relationships

chapter 19|25 pages

Korean Lexicon

chapter 20|11 pages

A lexical snapshot

An investigation into the evolving terminology of middle-school mathematics teachers in the United States