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Learning from similarities and differences: a reflection on the potentials and constraints of cross-national studies in mathematics

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Abstract

Research in mathematics education that crosses national boundaries provides new insights into the development and improvement of the teaching and learning of mathematics. In particular, cross-national comparisons lead researchers to more explicit understanding of their own implicit theories about how teachers teach and how children learn mathematics in their local contexts as well as what is going on in school mathematics in other countries. Further, when researchers from multiple countries and regions study collaboratively aspects of teaching and learning of mathematics, the taken-for-granted familiar practices in the classroom can be questioned. Such cross-national comparisons provide opportunities for researchers and educators to probe typical dichotomies such as “high-performing” versus “low performing”, “teacher-centred versus student-centred”, or even “East versus West”, in searching for similarities and differences in educational policies and practices in different cultural contexts.

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Correspondence to Yoshinori Shimizu.

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Shimizu, Y., Kaur, B. Learning from similarities and differences: a reflection on the potentials and constraints of cross-national studies in mathematics. ZDM Mathematics Education 45, 1–5 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11858-013-0489-3

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