TY - GEN
T1 - Digital Technology and Maths-education
T2 - 17th. European Conference on ELearning
AU - Levinsen, Karin Tweddell
AU - Sørensen, Birgitte Holm
PY - 2018/11
Y1 - 2018/11
N2 - Digital technologies challenge maths education as they provide the calculations that used to be the core of maths teaching. Although calculation is still important to learn, the core of maths-education is increasingly the understanding and application of concepts and language to authentic situations in order for machines to perform adequate calculations. While many e-learning applications support learning skills and calculations, maths teachers have difficulties finding digital resources aimed at maths as concepts and language. Accordingly, teachers experience a dilemma when their school managers expect them to digitalise their teaching. This paper is based on results from an action research project running from 2012 to 2016 following a cohort from first to third grade in a Copenhagen suburban school. The school aimed to implement iPads in everyday practice and provide teachers with competence building. Accordingly, all teachers and students were given an iPad. While the project had a broader scope, the present paper focuses on the teachers’ and students’ motivation and learning in relation to the iPad and maths in light of the above-described dilemma. As action researchers, the researchers acted as sparring partners for the teachers. The school provided resources for teacher team meetings on a weekly basis. At the meetings, the teachers became familiar with using iPads in learning settings, brainstormed ideas and co-designed experiments for upcoming sessions. The meetings provided a framework for iteratively sharing knowledge and improving practice. The data were collected using anthropological methods: observations, interviews, summaries, thick description, video recordings and collection of materials produced during the project. The data were analysed using condensation and annotation methods. The present paper identifies teacher practices and use of digital technology that amplifies the teachers’ dilemma of using technology in maths teaching. Equally, the paper provides examples of practices developed during the project that seem to overcome the dilemma.
AB - Digital technologies challenge maths education as they provide the calculations that used to be the core of maths teaching. Although calculation is still important to learn, the core of maths-education is increasingly the understanding and application of concepts and language to authentic situations in order for machines to perform adequate calculations. While many e-learning applications support learning skills and calculations, maths teachers have difficulties finding digital resources aimed at maths as concepts and language. Accordingly, teachers experience a dilemma when their school managers expect them to digitalise their teaching. This paper is based on results from an action research project running from 2012 to 2016 following a cohort from first to third grade in a Copenhagen suburban school. The school aimed to implement iPads in everyday practice and provide teachers with competence building. Accordingly, all teachers and students were given an iPad. While the project had a broader scope, the present paper focuses on the teachers’ and students’ motivation and learning in relation to the iPad and maths in light of the above-described dilemma. As action researchers, the researchers acted as sparring partners for the teachers. The school provided resources for teacher team meetings on a weekly basis. At the meetings, the teachers became familiar with using iPads in learning settings, brainstormed ideas and co-designed experiments for upcoming sessions. The meetings provided a framework for iteratively sharing knowledge and improving practice. The data were collected using anthropological methods: observations, interviews, summaries, thick description, video recordings and collection of materials produced during the project. The data were analysed using condensation and annotation methods. The present paper identifies teacher practices and use of digital technology that amplifies the teachers’ dilemma of using technology in maths teaching. Equally, the paper provides examples of practices developed during the project that seem to overcome the dilemma.
KW - digital technology
KW - instrumental mathematics
KW - relational mathematics
KW - e learning
KW - iPad
KW - ICT
UR - https://books.google.dk/books?id=Jox5DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA569&lpg=PA569&dq=Digital+Technology+and+Maths-education+%E2%80%93+The+Dilemma+of+Calculation+and+Conceptualisation&source=bl&ots=hb7ghmG--2&sig=Ap4X7nMEuUFH-sCn23syngMsmcU&hl=da&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjUw6T8ut7fAhWML1AKHX2VDLsQ6AEwA3oECAcQAQ#v=onepage&q=Digital%20Technology%20and%20Maths-education%20%E2%80%93%20The%20Dilemma%20of%20Calculation%20and%20Conceptualisation&f=false
M3 - Article in proceeding
SN - 9781912764075
T3 - Proceedings of the European Conference on e-Learning
SP - 569
EP - 576
BT - Proceedings of the 17th European conference of ELearning
A2 - Ntalianis, Klimis
A2 - Andreatos, Antonios
A2 - Sgouropoulou, Cleo
PB - Academic Conferences and Publishing International
Y2 - 1 November 2018 through 2 November 2018
ER -