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Emerging perspectives on gesture and embodiment in mathematics / edited by Laurie D. Edwards (Saint Mary's College of California), Francesca Ferrara (Università di Torino Italy), and Deborah Moore-Russo (University at Buffalo, State University of New York).

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Edwards, Laurie D., editor.
Ferrara, Francesca, editor.
Moore-Russo, Deborah, editor.
Series:
International perspectives on mathematics education.
International perspectives on mathematics education--cognition, equity & society
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Gesture in mathematics education.
Communication and education.
Mathematics--Study and teaching.
Mathematics.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (277 p.)
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
Charlotte, North Carolina : Information Age Publishing, Inc., 2014.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
The purpose of the book is to establish a common language for, and understanding of, embodiment as it applies to mathematical thinking, and to link mathematics education research to recent work in gesture studies, cognitive linguistics and the theory of embodied cognition. Just as in past decades, mathematics education experienced a "turn to the social" in which socio-cultural factors were explored, in recent years there has been a nascent "turn to the body." An increasing number of researchers and theorists in mathematics education have become interested in the fact that, although mathematics may be socially constructed, this construction is not arbitrary or unconstrained, but rather is rooted in, and shaped by, the body. All those who engage with mathematics, whether at an elementary or advanced level, share the same basic biological and cognitive capabilities, as well as certain common physical experiences that come with being humans living in a material world. In addition, the doing and communicating of mathematics is never a purely intellectual activity: it involves a wide range of bodily actions, from committing inscriptions to paper or whiteboard, to speaking, listening, gesturing and gazing. This volume will present recent research on gesture and mathematics, within a framework that addresses several levels of mathematical development. The chapters will begin with contributions that examine early mathematical and proto-mathematical knowledge, for example, the conservation of volume and counting. The role of gesture in teaching and learning arithmetic procedures will be addressed. Core concepts and tools from secondary level mathematics will be investigated, including algebra, functions and graphing. And finally, research into the embodied understanding of advanced topics in geometry and calculus will be presented.The overall goal for the volume is to acknowledge the multimodal nature of mathematical knowing, and to contribute to the creation of a model of the interactions and mutual influences of bodily motion, spatial thinking, gesture, speech and external inscriptions on mathematical thinking, communication and learning. The intended audience is researchers and theorists in mathematics education as well as graduate students in the field.
Contents:
Introduction / Deborah Moore-Russo, Laurie D. Edwards, Francesca Ferrara
Chapter 1. Embodiment, modalities and mathematical affordances / Laurie D. Edwards & Ornella Robutti
Section I. Gestures and embodiment in early mathematics
Chapter 2. Embodied knowledge in the development of conservation of quantity: Evidence from gesture / Martha Alibali, Breckie Church & Sotaro Kita
Chapter 3. Gesture's role in learning arithmetic / Susan Goldin-Meadow, Steven Jacobs, & Susan Levine
Section ii
Chapter 4. Gestures and embodiment in school mathematics / Ferdinando Arzarello & Cristina Sabena
Chapter 5. An exploratory study of multi-modalities in the mathematics classroom: Enrica's explanation of an experience / Francesca Ferrara, Ornella Robutti & Laurie D. Edwards
Chapter 6. The gestures of blind mathematics learners / Lulu Healy & Solange Hassan Ahmad Ali Fernandes
Section iii
Chapter 7. Gestures and embodiment in university mathematics / Deborah Moore-Russo & Janine Viglietti
Chapter 8. The role of conscious gesture mimicry in mathematical learning / Caroline Yoon, Michael Thomas & Tommy Dreyfus
Chapter 9. Re-conceiving modeling: An embodied cognition view of modeling / George Sweeney & Chris Rasmussen
Chapter 10. More than mere handwaving: Gesture and embodiment in expert mathematical proof / Tyler Marghetis, Laurie D. Edwards & Rafael Núñez
Chapter 11. Blending across modalities in mathematical discourse / Nathaniel Smith.
Notes:
Description based upon print version of record.
Includes bibliographical references.
Print version record.
ISBN:
1-62396-555-1
OCLC:
887223147

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