Abstract
The 21st century has seen a definite shift from teacher training towards teacher
education in initial teacher education programmes. As a tertiary educator in a postgraduate
initial teacher education program, I have seen the dichotomous thinking in which some of
my education students embrace the idea of an inquiry-based mathematics approach with
multiple solutions, while others, for whom mathematics has always been about finding a
solution through learned steps of reasoning, face insurmountable challenges. While
mathematics educators continue to advocate for a constructivist approach to learning,
current practice has not overwhelmingly shifted from the symbol manipulation procedural
approach. Could this be attributed to the notion that how we teach mathematics may be an
internally learned habit from the way we were taught and that change is difficult because it
requires that habit to be broken? Through the lived experiences of first-year teachers as
inquiring practitioners, I explore the concept of practitioner inquiry and its implication for
mathematics practitioners, and I consider how practitioner inquiry could be a catalyst for
transforming mathematics education practices.
Practitioner Inquiry: Developing Capabilities in Mathematics Teachers
Jyoti JhagrooThe 21st century has seen a definite shift from teacher training towards teacher education in initial teacher education programmes. As a tertiary educator in a postgraduate initial teacher education program, I have seen the dichotomous thinking in which some of my education students embrace the idea of an inquiry-based mathematics approach with multiple solutions, while others, for whom mathematics has always been about finding a solution through learned steps of reasoning, face insurmountable challenges. While mathematics educators continue to advocate for a constructivist approach to learning, current practice has not overwhelmingly shifted from the symbol manipulation procedural approach. Could this be attributed to the notion that how we teach mathematics may be an internally learned habit from the way we were taught and that change is difficult because it requires that habit to be broken? Through the lived experiences of first-year teachers as inquiring practitioners, I explore the concept of practitioner inquiry and its implication for mathematics practitioners, and I consider how practitioner inquiry could be a catalyst for transforming mathematics education practices.