Abstract
This article provides a critical evaluation of a technique of analysis, the Social Activity Method, recently offered by Dowling (2013) as a ‘gift’ to mathematics education. The method is found to be inadequate, firstly, because it employs a dichotomy (between ‘expression’ and ‘content’) instead of a finer analysis (into symbols, concepts and setting or phenomena), and, secondly, because the distinction between ‘public’ and ‘esoteric’ mathematics, although interesting, is allowed to obscure the structure of the mathematics itself. There is also criticism of what Dowling calls the ‘myth of participation’, which denies the intimate links between mathematics and the rest of the universe that lie at the heart of mathematical pedagogy. Behind all this lies Dowling’s ‘essentially linguistic’ conception of mathematics, which is criticised on the dual ground that it ignores the chastening experience of formalism in mathematical philosophy and that linguistics itself has taken a wrong turn and ignores lessons that might be learnt from mathematics education.
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I am most grateful for comments and assistance received from various colleagues, especially Margaret Brown and Jeremy Hodgen. I also owe much to Peter Gates and other anonymous reviewers of earlier drafts of the article.
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Cable, J. Mathematics is always invisible, Professor Dowling. Math Ed Res J 27, 359–384 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13394-015-0141-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13394-015-0141-3