R. Lavin, и J. Claro. JALTCALL 2005 Proceedings "Glocalization through CALL: Bringing people together", стр. 9--13. Ritsumeikan University BKC Campus, Shiga, Japan, (2005)
H. Freudenthal. Educational Studies in Mathematics, 1 (1/2):
3-8(мая 1968)Systematization is a great virtue of mathematics, and if possible, the student has to learn this virtue, too. But then I mean the activity of systematizing, not its result. Its result is a system, a beautiful closed system, closed, with no entrance and no exit. In its highest perfection it can even be handled by a machine. But for what can be performed by machines, we need no humans. What humans have to learn is not mathematics as a closed system, but rather as an activity, the process of mathematizing reality and if possible even that of mathematizing mathematics..
P. Ernest. Why Learn Maths, London University Institute of Education, London, 1. To reproduce mathematical skill and knowledge based capability
The typical traditional reproductive mathematics curriculum has focused exclusively on this first aim, comprising a narrow reading of mathematical capability. At the highest level, not always realised, the learner learns to answer questions posed by the teacher or text. As is argued elsewhere (Ernest 1991) this serves not only to reproduce mathematical knowledge and skills in the learner, but to reproduce the social order and social injustice as well.
2. To develop creative capabilities in mathematics
The progressive mathematics teaching movement has added a second aim, to allow the learner to be creative and express herself in mathematics, via problem solving, investigational work, using a variety of representations, and so on. This allows the learner to pose mathematical questions, puzzles and problems, as well as to solve them. This notion adds the idea of creative personal development and the skills of mathematical questioning as a goal of schooling, but remains trapped in an individualistic ideology that fails to acknowledge the social and societal contexts of schooling, and thus tacitly endorses the social status quo.
3. To develop empowering mathematical capabilities and a critical appreciation of the social applications and uses of mathematics
Critical mathematics education adds in a third aim, the empowerment of the learner through the development of critical mathematical literacy capabilities and the critical appreciation of the mathematics embedded in social and political contexts. Thus the empowered learner will not only be able to pose and solve mathematical questions, but also be able to address important questions relating to the broad range of social uses (and abuses) of mathematics. This is a radical perspective and set of aims concerned with both the political and social empowerment of the learner and with the promotion of social justice, and which is realised in mainstream school education almost nowhere. However, the focus in the appreciation element developed in this perspective is on the external social contexts of mathematics. Admittedly these may include the history of mathematics and its past and present cultural contexts, but these do not represent any full treatment of mathematical appreciation.
4. To develop an inner appreciation of mathematics: its big ideas and nature
This fourth aim adds in further dimension of mathematical appreciation, namely the inner appreciation of mathematics, including the big ideas and nature of mathematics. The appreciation of mathematics as making a unique contribution to human culture with special concepts and a powerful aesthetic of its own, is an aim for school mathematics often neglected by mathematicians and users of mathematics alike. It is common for persons like these to emphasise capability at the expense of appreciation, and external applications at the expense of its inner nature and values. One mistake that may be made in this connection is the assumption that an inner appreciation of mathematics cannot be developed without capability. Thus, according to this assumption, the student cannot appreciate infinity, proof, catastrophe theory and chaos, for example, unless they have developed capability in these high level mathematical topics, which is out of the question at school. The fourth aim questions this assumption and suggests that an inner appreciation of mathematics is not only possible but desirable to some degree for all students at school..(2000)
B. Joseph. The Ecology of Games: Connecting Youth, Games, and Learning, The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Series on Digital Media and Learning, (2007)
J. McGonigal. The Ecology of Games: Connecting Youth, Games, and Learning, -, The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Series on Digital Media and Learning, (2007)
L. Radford. Proceedings of the 29th Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 1, стр. 143-145. Melbourne, Australia, University of Melbourne, (2005)
P. Xia, S. Wu, и B. Van Durme. Proceedings of the 2020 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (EMNLP), стр. 7516--7533. Association for Computational Linguistics, (ноября 2020)
A. Kendall, и Y. Gal. Proceedings of the 31st International Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems, стр. 5580–5590. Red Hook, NY, USA, Curran Associates Inc., (2017)
A. Yousef, M. Chatti, U. Schroeder, и M. Wosnitza. Advanced Learning Technologies (ICALT), 2014 IEEE 14th International Conference on, стр. 44--48. IEEE, IEEE Computer Society, (2014)
J. Ehlers, и K. Sostmann. GMS Zeitschrift für Medizinische Ausbildung, (2013-2-21)PMID: 23468818 ; PMCID: PMC3589683 ; Lizenzbedingungen: open-access http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/: This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (). You are free to copy, distribute and transmit the work, provided the original author and source are credited. ; Quelldatenbank: PUBMED.
G. Sakko, T. Martin, T. Vause, G. Martin, и C. Yu. American Journal on Mental Retardation, 109 (1):
44-52(января 2004)MT: Print; FO: Print; PO: Human; Male; Female; AG: Adulthood (18-yrs-and-older); Young-Adulthood (18-29-yrs); Thirties (30-39-yrs); Middle-Age (40-64-yrs); LO: Canada; MD: Empirical-Study; Quantitative-Study; CRN: Number of References: 17; Displayed: 17.; REF: Barker-Collo, S., Jamieson, J., & Boo, F. (1995). Assessment of Basic Learning Abilities test: Prediction of communication ability in persons with developmental disabilities. International journal of Practical Approaches to Disability, 19, 23-28. Harapiak, S., Martin, G. L., & Yu, D. (1999). Hierarchical ordering of auditory discriminations and the Assessment of Basic Learning Abilities test. Journal of Developmental Disabilities, 6, 32-50. Kerr, N., Meyerson, L., & Flora, J. A. (1977). The measurement of motor, visual, and auditory discrimination skills Monograph. Rehabilitation Psychology, 24, 95-112. Martin, G. L., & Pear, J. J. (2003). Behavior modification: What is it and how to do it (7th ed.). Upper Saddle Rivers, NJ: Prentice-Hall. Martin, G. L., & Yu, D. (2000). Overview of research on the Assessment of Basic Learning Abilities test. Journal of Developmental Disabilities, 7, 10-36. Martin, G. L., Yu, D., Quinn, G., & Patterson, S. (1983). Measurement and training of AVC discrimination skills: Independent confirmation and extension. Rehabilitation Psychology, 28, 231-237. doi:10.1037//0090-5550.28.4.231 Meyerson, L. (1977). AVC behavior and attempts to modify it Monograph. Rehabilitation Psychology, 24, 119-122. Stubbings, V., & Martin, G. L. (1995). The ABLA test for predicting performance of develop-mentally disabled persons on prevocational training tasks. International Journal of Practical Approaches to Disability, 19, 12-17. Stubbings, V., & Martin, G. L. (1998). Matching training tasks to abilities of people with mental retardation: A learning test versus experienced staff. American Journal on Mental Retardation, 102, 473-484. doi:10.1352/0895-8017(1998)1022.0.CO;2 Tharinger, D., Schauert, D., & Kerr, N. (1977). Use of AVC tasks to predict classroom learning in mentally retarded children. Rehabilitation Psychology, 24, 113-118. Vause, T., Martin, G. L., & Yu, D. (1999). Aberrant behavior of persons with developmental disabilities as a function of the characteristics of training tasks. International Journal of Rehabilitation Research, 22, 321-325. Vause, T., Martin, G. L., Cornick, A., Harapiak, S., Chong, L., Yu, D. C. T., & Garinger, J. (2000). Training task assignments and aberrant behavior of persons with developmental disabilities. Journal on Developmental Disabilities, 7, 37-53. Wacker, D. P. (1981). Applicability of discrimination assessment procedure with hearing impaired mentally handicapped clients. Journal of the Association for the Severely Handicapped, 6, 51-58. Wacker, D. P., Kerr, N. J., & Carroll, J. L. (1983). Discrimination skill as a predictor of prevocational performance of institutionalized mentally retarded clients. Rehabilitation Psychology, 28, 45-49. doi:10.1037//0090-5550.28.1.45 Wacker, D. P., Steil, D. A., & Greenebaum, F. T. (1983). Assessment of discrimination skills of multiply-handicapped preschoolers and prediction of classroom task performance. Journal of the Association for the Severely Handicapped, 8, 65-78. Witt, J. C., & Wacker, D. P. (1981). Teaching children to respond to auditory directives: An evaluation of two procedures. Behavior Research of Severe Developmental Disabilities, 2, 175-189. Yu, D., & Martin, G. L. (1986). Comparison of two procedures to teach visual discriminations to severely mentally handicapped persons. Journal of Practical Approaches to Developmental Handicap, 10, 7-12..