Co-chairs: Susie Groves, Julian Williams.
Team members: Brian Doig, Rita Borromeo Ferri, Nicholas Mousoulides.
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Keywords
- Topic Study Group
- Interdisciplinary Mathematics
- TUESDAY POSTERS
- Inter Disciplinary
- Relevant Learning Outcomes
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.
The Programme
Topic Study Group 22 Interdisciplinary mathematics education included paper presentations and discussion in four main sessions, four oral communication sessions, and one poster presentation session—see below .
The Topic Study Group team also produced the Springer ICME-13 Topical Survey Interdisciplinary Mathematics Education: A State of the Art (Williams et al., 2016) for pre-reading .
Main Sessions
Tuesday 12.00–13.30: Chair—Susie Groves | Wednesday 12.00–13.30: Chair—Rita Borromeo Ferri |
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Introduction to TSG22—Julian Williams | Introduction to session 2—Rita Borromeo Ferri |
Overview of the TSG22 Topical Survey Interdisciplinary Mathematics Education: A State of the Art—Susie Groves | A modelling perspective in designing interdisciplinary professional learning communities—Nicholas Mousoulides |
Theory of disciplinarity and interdisciplinary activity: Communities, boundaries, voices and hybridity—Julian Williams and Wolff-Michael Roth | Mathematics in an interdisciplinary STEM course (NLT) in the Netherlands—Nelleke Susanna den Braber, Jenneke Krüger, Marco Mazereeuw and Wilmad Kuiper |
Challenges for mathematics within an interdisciplinary STEM education—Russell Tytler | Preservice mathematics teachers’ interdisciplinary work for STEM education—Fatma Aslan-Tutak and Sevil Akaygun |
Inter-disciplinary mathematics: Old wine in new bottles?—Brian Doig and Wendy Jobling | Closing discussion—including possible research agenda between ICME-13 and ICME-14 |
Closing discussion—including possibilities for a book | |
Friday 12.00–13.30: Chair—Nicholas Mousoulides | Saturday 12.00–13.30: Chair—Julian Williams |
Introduction to session 3—Nicholas Mousoulides | Introduction to session 4—Julian Williams |
Scientific inquiry in mathematics and STEM education—Andrzej Sokolowski | Ratio and proportion in secondary school science—David Swanson |
Using real-life context as an aid for mathematics teaching and learning—Michael Erotoma Omuvwie | Interdisciplinary communication between music and mathematics: An experience with stochastic music—María Alicia Venegas Thayer |
Quantitative reasoning: Rasch measurement to support QR assessment—Robert Lee Mayes, Kent Rittschof, Jennifer Forrester and Jennifer Christus | Inspired by Leonardo da Vinci—STEM learning for primary and secondary school with the Cross-Link Approach—Rita Borromeo Ferri, Andreas Meister, Detlef Kuhl and Astrid Hülsmann |
Closing discussion—including possible Discussion Group or Working Group at ICME-14 | Closing discussion—including decision on possible Springer book |
Oral Communications
Tuesday 15.00–16.00: Chair—Brian Doig | Tuesday 16.30-18.00: Chair—Rita Borromeo Ferri |
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Mathematics and sciences teachers collaboratively design interdisciplinary lesson plans: Benefits, limitations, and concerns—Atara Shriki and Ilana Lavy | Investigating interdisciplinary approaches and commitments through pre-service teachers’ use of mathematics and poetry—Nenad Radakovic, Limin Jao and Susan Jagger |
Teaching and applying research methods in a cross-cultural project for students of mathematics education—Mutfried Hartmann, Thomas Borys, Arno Bayer and Tetsushi Kawasaki | Mathematics and medicine: A study of thinking and variational language – Gloria Angélica Moreno Durazo and Ricardo Cantoral |
Doing inter-disciplinary work in mathematics education: Potentialities and challenges—Sikunder Ali Baber | Teachers’ readiness to mathematics and science integration—Betul Yeniterzi, Cigdem Haser, and Mine Isiksal-Bostan |
Interdiciplinary activities in context—Maite Gorriz, and Santi Vilches | Incorporating mathematics, creative writing, literature and arts in the classroom—Frederick Lim Uy |
Friday 15.00-16.00: Chair—Susie Groves | Friday 16.30-18.00: Chair—Nicholas Mousoulides |
A cloud based performance support system for teaching STEM with hands-on modeling—Roberto Araya | Integrating mathematics, engineering and technology through mathematics modeling and video representations—Carlos Alfonso LopezLeiva, Marios Pattichis and Sylvia Celedon-Pattichis |
Korean mathematics textbook analysis: Focusing on competence, on contexts and ways of integration—Jong-Eun Moon, Mi-Yeong Park, Jeong Soo-Yong and Mi-Kyung Ju | An experimental textbook system for financial mathematics for the integration of finance and mathematics—OhNam Kwon, JungSook Park, JeeHyun Park, Jaehee Park and Changsuk Lee |
Mathematics of money dynamics—Francesco Scerbo, Elena Scordo and Laura Vero | Co-disciplinary mathematics and physics research and study courses (RSC) in the secondary school and the university—Maria Rita Otero, Vivianna Carolina Llanos, Maria Paz Gazzola and Marcelo Arlego |
Transcending the mathematics classroom—Signe E. Kastberg, Rachel Long, Kathleen Lynch-Davis and Beatriz S. D’Ambrosio | Investigating students’ difficulties with differential equations in physics—Diarmaid Aidan Hyland, Paul van Kampen and Brien Nolan |
Posters—Tuesday 18.00–20.00
Assessment of mathematical competencies of biology teacher trainees—Ivana Boboňová and Soňa Čeretková | Relationahips of cognitive domains: Focus on reasoning and applying in mathematics and science—Amanda Meiners, Jihyun Hwang and Kyong Mi Choi |
QUBES: Quantitative Undergraduate Biology Education and Synthesis—Carrie Diaz Eaton, Sam Donovan, Stith T. Gower and Kristin Jenkins | Usage of mathematics competency in a new context in science: Experience of Latvia—Ilze France, Līga Čakāne, Uldis Dzērve, Dace Namsone and Jānis Vilciņš |
Enacting planets—Emmanuel Rollinde | Geometry from a global perspective—Craig Russell |
Students’ aspirations for STEM careers—Kathryn Holmes, Adam Lloyd, Jennifer Gore, Max Smith, Leanne Fray and Claire Wallington | Geometry in Slovak blueprint—Soňa Čeretková and Edita Smiešková |
Fostering of interdisciplinary competences through basic education in computer science in mathematics in primary school—Peter Ludes | Preparing STEM teachers as researchers: A research experiences for undergraduates project—Jennifer Wilhelm and Molly H. Fisher |
An interdisciplinary activity on angiogenesis—Catherine Langman, Judi Zawojewski and Patricia McNicholas | Relationahips of cognitive domains: Focus on reasoning and applying in mathematics and science—Amanda Meiners, Jihyun Hwang and Kyong Mi Choi |
Interdisciplinary mathematics education is a relatively new field of research, which has become increasingly prominent because of the political agenda around STEM. However, there are also increasing mathematical demands outside STEM—for example, the need to effectively critique the vast amounts of statistical information evident in all aspects of society—as well as increasing interest in how mathematics inter-relates with other disciplines and contexts.
The level of interest in interdisciplinary mathematics education was evident in the number of presentations and participants at the main sessions and oral communications, and the vibrant discussions that took place. Presentations were complemented by a range of posters that allowed a wide group of attendees to discuss ideas of interdisciplinarity during the poster viewing time.
Disciplinarity is a social phenomenon, marked by increasing specialization and differentiation of practices, professional disciplines—such as nursing, teaching, physiotherapy—often defined by practical competence. It is often difficult for those schooled in one field to relate effectively with others from relatively independent and contradictory fields, with boundaries between disciplines notoriously difficult to cross, which might explain why interdisciplinarity is often praised rhetorically but so difficult to practice.
Interdisciplinarity occurs across a continuum ranging from mono-disciplinarity to meta-disciplinarity. Mono-disciplinarity involves a single discipline only, while multi-disciplinarity involves two or more disciplines, but in both these cases the disciplines themselves may remain intact. Inter-disciplinarity, on the other hand, involves some sort of hybridising of “multi” disciplines—e.g. chemistry and biology becoming biochemistry. Trans-disciplinarity acquires its transcendence due to disciplines being subsumed in joint problem solving enterprises that may perhaps result in a new form of mathematics. While multi-disciplinarity and trans-disciplinarity offering hybridity of disciplines, the disciplines themselves are not displaced, but instead provide the value interdisciplinarity requires. Meta-disciplinarity transpires in an awareness of relationships and differences between disciplines—e.g. the contrasting nature of “using evidence” in history and science may be contrasted and thereby clarified (see Williams et al., 2016).
As can be seen from the programme details, presenters covered a wide range of topics under the umbrella of interdisciplinarity. Presenters provided views of interdisciplinarity from several academic disciplines, including mathematics, physics, medicine and music, as well as across much of the spectrum of interdisciplinarity discussed above. In addition, presenters represented a wide cross-section of countries, which added to the notion that interdisciplinarity is indeed of global interest and importance. Of particular note were presentations and posters outside the expected scientific disciplines, for example, music and poetry. Discussion following each presentation allowed a range of perspectives to be aired. Attendees brought to the discussion the perspectives of many different educational cultures, their affordances and their constraints.
The review of the literature carried out as part of the pre-ICME Topical Survey showed that interdisciplinary mathematics education is relatively under-developed as a research subfield. There is some evidence of beneficial outcomes of interdisciplinary work in integrated curricula that often involves projects, with these benefits typically emphasising motivational, affective and problem-solving learning outcomes. The papers and presentations reinforced these conclusions.
Progress in interdisciplinary mathematics education appears to be hampered by a lack of clarity and consensus about the concept of disciplinarity and how to adequately describe “interdisciplinary” interventions and programs, together with a lack of consistency about relevant learning outcomes and how they can be identified and measured, and a lack of research on which future work can build.
Interdisciplinary mathematics education offers the opportunity to encourage possibly disaffected students to reconsider mathematics. It offers mathematics to the wider world in the form of added value—e.g. in problem solving—and, conversely, it offers the added value of the wider world to mathematics. Therefore interdisciplinary mathematics education should be a major topic for mathematics education and can be expected to become much more prominent in educational research and practice.
Discussion among the large group of session attendees, almost all of whom attended all main sessions, was fruitful. Plans were made to set up a website for continued contact among members of the Topic Study Group between ICME congresses, with a decision to be made closer to ICME-14 as to whether to attempt to continue the Topic Study Group or try to reconvene as a Discussion Group.
All participants were invited to submit abstracts for a proposed Springer monograph, with approximately 25 proposals for chapters currently under review.
Reference
Williams, J. M., Roth, W.-M., Swanson, D., Doig, B., Groves, S., Omuvwie, M., …, Mousoulides, N. (2016). Interdisciplinary mathematics education: A state of the art. Berlin: Springer. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-42267-1
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Groves, S., Williams, J., Doig, B., Borromeo Ferri, R., Mousoulides, N. (2017). Topic Study Group No. 22: Interdisciplinary Mathematics Education. In: Kaiser, G. (eds) Proceedings of the 13th International Congress on Mathematical Education. ICME-13 Monographs. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-62597-3_49
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