ABSTRACT

This book brings together scholars working in the field of mathematics education to examine the ways in which learners form particular relationships with mathematics in the context of formal schooling. While demand for the mathematically literate citizen increases, many learners continue to reject mathematics and experience it as excluding and exclusive, even when they succeed at it. In exploring this phenomenon, this volume focuses on learners' developing sense of self and their understanding of the part played by mathematics in it. It recognizes the part played by emotional responses, the functioning of classroom communities of practice, and by discourses of mathematics education in this process. It thus blends perspectives from psychoanalysis, socio-cultural theory and discursive approaches in a focus on the classic issues of selection and assessment, pedagogy, curriculum, choice, and teacher development.

chapter 1|4 pages

Introduction

ByLAURA BLACK, HEATHER MENDICK, YVETTE SOLOMON

part |4 pages

Part I Selection and Assessment

chapter 3|12 pages

Pain, Pleasure, and Power: Selecting and Assessing Defended Subjects

ByLAURA BLACK, HEATHER MENDICK, MELISSA RODD

part |4 pages

Part II Choice

chapter 5|11 pages

Telling Stories About Mathematics

ByMARK BOYLAN, HILARY POVEY

chapter 7|12 pages

Special Cases: Neoliberalism, Choice, and Mathematics

ByHEATHER MENDICK, MARIE-PIERRE MOREAU, AND DEBBIE EPSTEIN

part |4 pages

Part IV Pedagogy

chapter 12|11 pages

Hybridity of Maths and Peer Talk: Crazy Maths

ByPAULINE DAVIS, JULIAN WILLIAMS

chapter 13|10 pages

Pedagogy, Discourse, and Identity

BySTEPHEN LERMAN

part |4 pages

Part V Teacher Development

part |2 pages

Part VI Endings