Using a transdisciplinary framework to examine mathematics classroom talk taking place in and through a second language

This paper proposes a transdisciplinary framework to allow for a multifocal exploration of classroom talk practices. It draws on data from a broader study of talk in South African Grade 4 mathematics classrooms where the language of teaching and learning (English) was the home language for neither t...

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Main Authors: Graven, Mellony, Robertson, Sally-Ann
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/69838
https://DOI: 10.1007/s11858-018-0952-2
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-295862018-12-11T04:30:23ZUsing a transdisciplinary framework to examine mathematics classroom talk taking place in and through a second languageGraven, MellonyRobertson, Sally-AnnThis paper proposes a transdisciplinary framework to allow for a multifocal exploration of classroom talk practices. It draws on data from a broader study of talk in South African Grade 4 mathematics classrooms where the language of teaching and learning (English) was the home language for neither the teachers nor their students. Lesson transcript data from one teacher’s lessons on fractions are used to demonstrate how working with three strands of conceptual insight from the disciplines of psychology, sociology and linguistics conduces to a potentially richer understanding of a teacher’s use of classroom talk in mediating her students’ mathematical understanding. By drawing on elements of Vygotsky’s sociocultural psychology, we make visible in the lesson data the ways in which this teacher used the ‘everyday’ in trying to navigate her students’ towards more ‘scientific’ conceptualizations of unit fractions. By then taking up aspects of Bernstein’s sociological work, we articulate, and make visible, how societal circumstances impinge on students’ access to exploratory mathematical discourse needed for epistemological access to abstract and generalized mathematical concepts. Finally, through Halliday’s work on the power of particular linguistic registers for meaning-making, we highlight challenges in learning mathematics in and through a second language and reveal the constraints placed on students’ opportunity to maximally exploit the distinct forms of meaning contained within the mathematics register.2009textarticle14 pagespdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10962/69838vital:29586https://DOI: 10.1007/s11858-018-0952-2EnglishZDM Mathematics EducationGraven,MellonyUse of this resource is governed by the terms and conditions of the SpringerLink Terms of Use statement (https://link.springer.com/termsandconditions)
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description This paper proposes a transdisciplinary framework to allow for a multifocal exploration of classroom talk practices. It draws on data from a broader study of talk in South African Grade 4 mathematics classrooms where the language of teaching and learning (English) was the home language for neither the teachers nor their students. Lesson transcript data from one teacher’s lessons on fractions are used to demonstrate how working with three strands of conceptual insight from the disciplines of psychology, sociology and linguistics conduces to a potentially richer understanding of a teacher’s use of classroom talk in mediating her students’ mathematical understanding. By drawing on elements of Vygotsky’s sociocultural psychology, we make visible in the lesson data the ways in which this teacher used the ‘everyday’ in trying to navigate her students’ towards more ‘scientific’ conceptualizations of unit fractions. By then taking up aspects of Bernstein’s sociological work, we articulate, and make visible, how societal circumstances impinge on students’ access to exploratory mathematical discourse needed for epistemological access to abstract and generalized mathematical concepts. Finally, through Halliday’s work on the power of particular linguistic registers for meaning-making, we highlight challenges in learning mathematics in and through a second language and reveal the constraints placed on students’ opportunity to maximally exploit the distinct forms of meaning contained within the mathematics register.
author Graven, Mellony
Robertson, Sally-Ann
spellingShingle Graven, Mellony
Robertson, Sally-Ann
Using a transdisciplinary framework to examine mathematics classroom talk taking place in and through a second language
author_facet Graven, Mellony
Robertson, Sally-Ann
author_sort Graven, Mellony
title Using a transdisciplinary framework to examine mathematics classroom talk taking place in and through a second language
title_short Using a transdisciplinary framework to examine mathematics classroom talk taking place in and through a second language
title_full Using a transdisciplinary framework to examine mathematics classroom talk taking place in and through a second language
title_fullStr Using a transdisciplinary framework to examine mathematics classroom talk taking place in and through a second language
title_full_unstemmed Using a transdisciplinary framework to examine mathematics classroom talk taking place in and through a second language
title_sort using a transdisciplinary framework to examine mathematics classroom talk taking place in and through a second language
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/69838
https://DOI: 10.1007/s11858-018-0952-2
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