Tools of American Mathematics Teaching, 1800–2000

Tools of American Mathematics Teaching, 1800–2000

Author: Peggy Aldrich Kidwell

Publisher: JHU Press

Published: 2008-08-11

Total Pages: 437

ISBN-13: 080188814X

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From the blackboard to the graphing calculator, the tools developed to teach mathematics in America have a rich history shaped by educational reform, technological innovation, and spirited entrepreneurship. In Tools of American Mathematics Teaching, 1800–2000, Peggy Aldrich Kidwell, Amy Ackerberg-Hastings, and David Lindsay Roberts present the first systematic historical study of the objects used in the American mathematics classroom. They discuss broad tools of presentation and pedagogy (not only blackboards and textbooks, but early twentieth-century standardized tests, teaching machines, and the overhead projector), tools for calculation, and tools for representation and measurement. Engaging and accessible, this volume tells the stories of how specific objects such as protractors, geometric models, slide rules, electronic calculators, and computers came to be used in classrooms, and how some disappeared.


Informal Geometry Explorations

Informal Geometry Explorations

Author: Margaret J. Kenney

Publisher: Pearson Education

Published: 1997-02

Total Pages: 108

ISBN-13: 9780866515467

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More than 75 motivational problem-solving activities explore geometry in the natural and human worlds: counting, area, construction, congruence, visualization, symmetry, tiling, and dissection. These versatile problems introduce new topics, reinforce and review ideas, or simply serve as a change of pace. Blackline masters and answer key.


Motherhood, Childhood, and Parenting in an Age of Education

Motherhood, Childhood, and Parenting in an Age of Education

Author: Maryellen Schaub

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Published: 2023-05-05

Total Pages: 161

ISBN-13: 1000876527

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Motherhood, as a celebrated yet underappreciated role, is often thought of as a natural process, something instinctive that we refine by watching our own mothers and others in our community. We rarely think of motherhood as something that is time and culturally specific, yet, like culture itself, it is socially constructed, and both motherhood and childhood evolve over time. With the rise in educational attainment of mothers in the American population, the expectations associated with childhood increasingly include not just education but cognitive development and extracurricular activities as the partnership between parents and education intensifies in the joint project of human development of children. Motherhood, Childhood, and Parenting in an Age of Education offers a new way to conceptualize the high demands of contemporary parenthood. It traces the emerging narrative about the "good mother," changes in the underlying assumptions of what constitutes the "good mother," and the implications for the "good childhood" as education grows in institutional strength. This book demonstrates that education is driving the formation of the parent and child roles in the dominant contemporary culture of the US although alternate models exist. Education itself has expanded over time to become our largest social intervention, defining behaviors and beliefs such as parental involvement in schooling, the unengaged parent, and the deficient student.