Mathematics and culture in Micronesia
Tipo de documento
Autores
Lista de autores
Dawson, Sandy
Resumen
Wheatley and Frieze’s book, walk out walk on, provides the conceptual framework for an examination of project MACIMISE, a National Science Foundation funded project that focused on the languages and cultural practices of nine pacific islands and the state of Hawai‘i. MACIMISE, pronounced as if spelled ‘maximize’, is a 5-year project. The project’s task is the development of elementary school mathematics curriculum units sensitive to local mathematical thought and experience. There were twenty-one participants (who call themselves the Macimisers) in the project. The participants were educated in ethnographic and anthropological research strategies to enable them to retrieve/uncover cultural practices extant in the communities where they lived. This academics work was accomplished partially via distance learning when the participants were registered in advanced degree programs at the University of Hawai‘i—Mānoa. In this paper, the project is analyzed in terms of the concepts (scaling across, start anywhere—follow it everywhere, intervention to friendship, the art of hosting and the use of circle) advanced by Wheatley and Frieze.
Fecha
2015
Tipo de fecha
Estado publicación
Términos clave
A distancia | Desarrollo | Etnomatemática | Pensamientos matemáticos
Enfoque
Idioma
Revisado por pares
Formato del archivo
Revista
Revista Latinoamericana de Etnomatemática: Perspectivas Socioculturales de la Educación Matemática
Volumen
8
Número
2
Rango páginas (artículo)
256-270
ISSN
20115474
Referencias
Baldwin, C. (1998). Calling the Circle: The First and Future Culture. New York: Bantam Books. Tutu, D. (1999). No Future Without Forgiveness. London: Rider Wheatley, M., & Frieze, D. (2011). Walk Out Walk On. San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler Publisher.