Abstract
This paper reports on a small pilot study conducted in an Indigenous P-13 school in North Queensland. This pilot study occurred over a two day period with the specific aim of exploring the role of oral language and representations in negotiating mathematical understanding. Implications are drawn for the implementation of a large study, commencing
in 2007 with 4-year-old Indigenous students as they transition from home to school. All students in this context either speak Aboriginal English or Creole as their first language. The pilot study occurred in two classrooms, one with 15 Year 6/7 students and the other with fourteen Years 4/5/6 students. The preliminary results indicate that explicit consideration needs to be given to the development of precise mathematical language, strategies for linking school mathematics to home environments, the use of questioning in establishing classroom discourse, and the recognition that many of these classrooms are bilingual.
Elizabeth Warren, Janelle Young and Eva deVries