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Mathematics is a subject held in high esteem around the world, yet
the teaching and learning of mathematics is rarely viewed as good
enough and many find the subject difficult to comprehend, or engage
with. In Manufacturing the Mathematical Child, Anna Llewellyn asks
some difficult questions in order to determine why this is the case
and to question who it is that we allow to succeed at mathematics,
particularly within the context of neoliberalism, where education
is a product of the market. By looking at the various sites of
production, Llewellyn examines the ways that key discursive spaces
produce very different expectations of what it means to do
mathematics and demonstrates that these place various homogenised
expectations upon children. Arguing that these are not natural, but
instead a reproduction of discursive norms, the book demonstrates
why some people fit these standardized ways of being and others do
not. Using England as a case study and referring to other
international contexts, Llewellyn argues that there is a
functionality found within certain educational policy discourses,
and a romantic attachment to the natural child found within
educational research, neither of which can match what happens in
the messy classroom. As a result, it becomes evident that exclusion
from mathematics is inevitable for many children. Original and
exciting, this book will be of great interest to academics,
researchers and postgraduate students within the fields of
mathematics education, childhood studies, policy studies, and
Foucauldian or post-structural analysis.
Mathematics is a subject held in high esteem around the world, yet
the teaching and learning of mathematics is rarely viewed as good
enough and many find the subject difficult to comprehend, or engage
with. In Manufacturing the Mathematical Child, Anna Llewellyn asks
some difficult questions in order to determine why this is the case
and to question who it is that we allow to succeed at mathematics,
particularly within the context of neoliberalism, where education
is a product of the market. By looking at the various sites of
production, Llewellyn examines the ways that key discursive spaces
produce very different expectations of what it means to do
mathematics and demonstrates that these place various homogenised
expectations upon children. Arguing that these are not natural, but
instead a reproduction of discursive norms, the book demonstrates
why some people fit these standardized ways of being and others do
not. Using England as a case study and referring to other
international contexts, Llewellyn argues that there is a
functionality found within certain educational policy discourses,
and a romantic attachment to the natural child found within
educational research, neither of which can match what happens in
the messy classroom. As a result, it becomes evident that exclusion
from mathematics is inevitable for many children. Original and
exciting, this book will be of great interest to academics,
researchers and postgraduate students within the fields of
mathematics education, childhood studies, policy studies, and
Foucauldian or post-structural analysis.
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