This book develops a framework for discussing primary school
teachers making changes to their understandings and practices. The
framework has been developed to allow the complexity of external
and internal aspects of change processes to be explored in a
holistic way.
External factors influencing teachers include increased
specification of the curriculum, changing demands for styles of
pedagogy and a rhetoric of Lifelong Learning. Such factors have to
be looked at in relation to individual teacher's internal responses
to mathematics. For many primary school teachers mathematics is a
subject that causes concern; its place within their personal
biographies may be uncomfortable and replete with memories of
confusion, pain and limited success. Professional understandings of
mathematics build upon the understandings from personal histories.
Discussing teacher change within the interplay of the external and
internal is inherently difficult. Responses to this difficulty have
tended to take the form of simplifying the task and dealing with
the external separately from the internal.
This book will be of interest to a wide range of people working
in the field of primary mathematics education, including policy
makers, Initial Teacher Education lecturers, Master's students and
researchers, practising primary school teachers and those engaged
in the management of mathematics in primary schools. While the
context of the book is specific to a period of time when a National
Numeracy Strategy was being introduced into schools in England, the
themes that the chapters tackle are broader and consider issues of
interest to anyone concerned with the development of mathematics
teaching.
General
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