[Maths-Education] Re: Research and teacher practices for 'working class' underachievement in secondary mathematics

Candia Morgan C.Morgan at ioe.ac.uk
Fri Feb 18 15:11:46 GMT 2011


You could look at the work of Eric Gutstein, Marylin Frankenstein and others who work with 'criticalmathematics'. 
It is not so much about 'breaking through' the students' identities as finding ways of working with mathematics that are meaningful to their real lives.
Candia

Dr Candia Morgan
Reader in Education
Department of Geography, Enterprise, Mathematics and Science
Institute of Education
20 Bedford Way
London WC1H 0AL
United Kingdom

Tel. (+44) (0)7612 6677

c.morgan at ioe.ac.uk
________________________________________
From: maths-education-bounces at lists.nottingham.ac.uk [maths-education-bounces at lists.nottingham.ac.uk] On Behalf Of Phillip Kent [phillip.kent at gmail.com]
Sent: 18 February 2011 14:08
To: maths-education
Subject: [Maths-Education] Research and teacher practices for 'working class' underachievement in secondary mathematics

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Dear colleagues,

I'd appreciate some pointers to research and guidance on dealing with
the problem of 'working class' underachievement in maths in secondary
school. I realise there is a huge literature on this, in terms of
statistical analysis on the existence of the problem, sociological-type
analysis of classroom behaviours (a la Bernstein, etc), and research on
teachers' beliefs about 'ability' and so on.

However, I'm specifically interested in any research/guidance about what
is effective for maths teachers to do in practice in classrooms. There
is a very familiar type of student who for 'social' reasons comes to
construct for him or herself an identity as someone who 'can't do
maths', which is not related to his or her actual mathematical
potential. Then how should the teacher break through this identity to
tap into the actual potential and interest?

Perhaps I am wrong to see this as essentially a problem of 'class'. Any
thoughts welcome.

- Phillip

--
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Dr Phillip Kent, London, UK
mathematics  education  technology  research
phillip.kent at gmail.com  mobile: 07950 952034
www.phillipkent.net
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