Abstract
In recent years mathematics educators have begun to draw on academic
disciplines beyond mathematics and traditional, cognitive psychology as
resources for theorising. Sociology, anthropology, and even psychoanalysis
have formed the theoretical framework for some researchers. Mathematics
education has become more conscious of culture, in all sorts of ways. But
in cultural studies, writers have been addressing what it is to be and to
communicate, and therefore to learn and to teach, in ways which of most of
us in mathematics education have not been aware. In this paper I attempt to
examine and use postmodem ideas to look, in particular, at mathematics
teaching.
Stephen Lerman
The Intension/Intention Of Teaching Mathematics