Abstract
This paper argues that we do not teach students to understand mathematics, We only teach them mathematics, and leave theunderstahding- or lack of it -up to them, The reason is that the affective aspects of students' m(lthematical experiences - feelings that are essential for understanding increasingly ,abstract mathematical concepts - are, perversely, continually reduced as the mathematics becomes increasingly more abstract. The two major causes of this anomaly are i) the mismatch between the structure of, understanding mathematics and its'logical' structure mirrored in mathematics curridula together with ii) the influence this has, in conjunction with Piagetian theory, on mathematics teaching. The role of inner affective contexts. in organising students' mathematical knowledge, developing their mathematical intuiti~n, in their learning and applications of mathematics is discussed. It 'is also considered how these organisational contexts are conceived and developed, and how to explicitly encouraged this during teaching children how to understandinathematical abstraction:
TONY BASTICK
Download Proceedings