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Brookes - yes. Weebecka's getting a much easier ride on TES than teasdaler did when she started out on NCETM scentless_apprentice:Again, you're saying therefore that Mathematics is a social construct. Which, frankly bewilders me.
Well that's not surprising. It's a totally bewildering and weird idea isn't it? I'm certainly not sure I totally understand it myself. I'm no idealist scentless_apprentice. I just kind of am where I am! I'm not sure where to begin with this - we could look at the difference between pure maths (which is entirely abstract, so we have issues as to whether it is a reality let alone an objective reality) and applied maths (which has been shown to mutate often and to be constructed in contexts). Or perhaps we could look at the philosophical and psychological foundations of constructivism. Constructivism is interesting because when you go on international forums it's a fundamental part of the theory of education. But when you come back to blighty and mention it the general reaction is 'burn the witch'. Or is this all going a bit far scentless_apprentice? Shall we just accept that you see maths as being an objective reality and I see it as being a personal, social and contextual reality (or something like that, I'm not sure I've expressed it very well)? The implications are not major - only that I deliberately teach my students to question as much of the core curriculum as possible and that I am open to the idea that some of the types of teaching described in parts 1, 3 & 4 of the POS could be more powerful (if we are indeed constructing a personal reality for students) than one would expect them to be if we were dealing with an objective reality. I'm not remotely interested in chucking away the core curriculum. But I want my students to question it and to have time to work on rich extended and contextualised activities too. Does that cover the philosophical journey form you to me? Do you want the practical ICT one or the experiential one?
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