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Humans-with-Media and the Reorganization of Mathematical Thinking: Information and Communication Technologies, Modeling, Visualization and Experimentation 2005 ed. [Hardback]

  • Format: Hardback, 232 pages, height x width: 235x155 mm, weight: 553 g, XXII, 232 p. 42 illus., 1 Hardback
  • Series: Mathematics Education Library 39
  • Pub. Date: 22-Mar-2005
  • Publisher: Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
  • ISBN-10: 0387242635
  • ISBN-13: 9780387242637
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  • Format: Hardback, 232 pages, height x width: 235x155 mm, weight: 553 g, XXII, 232 p. 42 illus., 1 Hardback
  • Series: Mathematics Education Library 39
  • Pub. Date: 22-Mar-2005
  • Publisher: Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
  • ISBN-10: 0387242635
  • ISBN-13: 9780387242637
Other books in subject:
This book offers a new conceptual framework for reflecting on the role of information and communication technology in mathematics education. Borba and Villarreal provide examples from research conducted at the level of basic and university-level education, developed by their research group based in Brazil, and discuss their findings in the light of the relevant literature. Arguing that different media reorganize mathematical thinking in different ways, they discuss how computers, writing and speech transform education at an epistemological as well as a political level. Modeling and experimentation are seen as pedagogical approaches which are in harmony with changes brought about by the presence of information and communication technology in educational settings. Examples of research about on-line mathematics education courses, and Internet used in regular mathematics courses, are presented and discussed at a theoretical level. In this book, mathematical knowledge is seen as developed by collectives of humans-with-media. The authors propose that knowledge is never constructed solely by humans, but by collectives of humans and technologies of intelligence. Theoretical discussion developed in the book, together with new examples, shed new light on discussions regarding visualization, experimentation and multiple representations in mathematics education. Insightful examples from educational practice open up new paths for the reader.
Dedication v
Contributing Authors xi
Preface xiii
Ubiratan D'Ambrosio
Foreword xvii
Acknowledgments xxi
Why another book about technology and mathematics education?
1(8)
Introduction
1(8)
Information technology, reorganization of thinking and humans-with-media
9(20)
The second industrial revolution and education
9(2)
Reorganization of thinking
11(4)
Intershaping relationship: stressing balance
15(2)
Humans and technology: a history of separation
17(4)
Media, humans and knowledge: possibilities of merging
21(8)
Modeling as a pedagogical approach: resonance with new media
29(34)
Introduction
29(4)
Problem solving, problem posing and modeling
33(14)
Roots of modeling in Brazil
47(5)
Project work: its roots in Denmark
52(2)
Modeling and information and communication technology
54(5)
Modeling and its limitations
59(4)
Experimental-with-technology approach: resonance with modeling and multiple representations
63(16)
Introduction
63(2)
Experimentation in mathematics
65(6)
Experimentation in mathematics education
71(5)
Multiple representations and media
76(3)
Visualization, mathematics education and computer environments
79(22)
Visualization: some definitions
79(3)
Visualization and media in mathematics
82(6)
Visualization and media in mathematics education
88(9)
Visualization and humans-with-media
97(4)
Modeling and media in action
101(24)
Introduction
101(1)
Modeling in a mathematics course for biology majors
102(3)
Modeling and humans-with-textbooks-Excel-paper-and-pencil collectives
105(4)
Modeling when the Internet becomes an actor
109(5)
Modeling humans-with-paper-and-pencil and... potatoes
114(5)
Science in action in the classroom and video clip culture
119(6)
Experimentation, visualization and media in action
125(44)
Introduction
125(1)
Experimenting with parabolas: visual conjectures
126(4)
Experimenting with conic sections: more visual conjectures
130(5)
Experimenting with functions I: the AG-GA theorem
135(5)
Experimenting with functions II: multiple representations and intermedia coordination
140(5)
Construction of derivatives: a graphical approach
145(6)
Tangent lines: visual and algebraic approaches
151(5)
Visualization, media and the voice of the students
156(2)
Visualization, experimentation and books
158(7)
Experimentation, visualization and reorganization of thinking
165(4)
Mathematics and Mathematics Education on-line
169(18)
Humans-with-Internet and education
169(4)
The nature of interaction in a distance education course
173(6)
Chat and mathematics in the classroom
179(5)
Research problems
184(3)
Methodology: an interface between epistemology and procedures 187(14)
Political dimensions of Information and Communication Technology 201(10)
Afterword 211(6)
Ole Skovsmose
References 217(10)
Index 227