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Mathematical Relationships Seminar Series Our Journeys Cathy Patricia Smith George
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London Students read messages into the results of assessment; they can accept, reject or extend the structures made available to them Dylan Wiliam (Socio-cultural) Different ways of teaching allow different positions for (different) students. How do we change the discourse of ‘maths is hard’ to something more positive? Candia Morgan & Heather Mendick (Discourse) Mathematics as ‘the enemy’ or mathematics as a defence Yvette Solomon & Laura Black (Psychoanalytic)
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Manchester What and how are cultural models produced in existing pedagogies, through social talk and/or maths talk? Julian Williams & Pauline Davis (Socio-cultural) The everyday is powerful in mathematics discourse; mathematics discourse is powerful in everyday life Steve Lerman (Discourse) Eroticism in mathematics; staying with the frisson Tamara Bibby (Psychoanalytic)
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Edinburgh Mathematics textbooks tend to promote certain identities but so do the tasks and the teacher’s mediation Birgit Pepin (Socio-cultural) ‘Suspend your belief in the innocence of words and the transparency of language as a window on an objectively graspable reality’ ( Maclure, 2003, p12) then you can ask: For whom, mathematics? Macintyre, Griffiths & Hamilton (Discursive) Connotations with death, absolutes and binaries offer mathematical identities an internal ‘moral’ logic Jenny Shaw (Psychoanalytic)
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Cardiff Students were given ‘many more ways to be successful, so more students were successful’ Jo Boaler (Socio-cultural) Structure, agency, and what looks like their interaction, are all assemblages of discourse Valerie Walkerdine (Discursive) ‘finding spaces to dance where none can be seen’ Hilary Povey & Mark Boylan (Psychoanalytic)
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Sheffield Tension as a source of learning Barbara Jaworski (Socio-cultural) Words enable as well as limit/constrain their associated identities Tansy Hardy (Discursive)) Are the stories we tell in coming to understandings of ourselves in mathematics gendered more than classed or ethnicised? Pat Drake (Psychoanalytic)
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We meet at last … at Lord’s
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