Eclectic theorisation: knowledge construction and practice

John Monaghan

School of Education, University of Leeds

Paper presented at the University of Leeds School of Education Research Conference, The role of theory in education research, Hinsley Hall, Leeds, 14 May 2007

What I wrote

My main interests are tool use by teachers and by learners, practice and epistemic matters – all with regard to mathematics. I also always try to get an holistic perspective in my work.

Important theoretical influences are:

SovietsDavydov on knowledge construction and Leont’ev on goals and actions.

AmericansWertsch on mediational means and Saxe on emergent goals.

French didacticsOn ‘instrumentation’ (turning an artefact into an instrument), the institutional dimension of knowledge construction and tasks & techniques (epistemic and pragmatic techniques).

My talk will briefly go over the above and then look at how I intend to employ these theoretical ideas in a little project John Threlfall and I have just started on the use of spreadsheets in KS2 and in KS3.

The discussion could focus on ideas I introduce or it could focus on the pros and cons of ‘mixing theories’. Regarding ‘mixing theories’ – maybe it is a bad idea. I think I do it because I’m basically a practical mathematics educator who wants an holistic account of learning and teaching mathematics with ‘things’. I’d defend my position by claiming that I’m not trying to get a ‘unified theory’ and recognise that the theories I use have different historical roots.

Davydov

On the concrete and the abstract (one aspect of knowledge construction)

A lot of ‘abstraction’ in maths but what is abstraction?

Abstraction ain’t ‘pattern spotting’ but progresses from an initial entity and ends with a consistent final form. He calls this progression the ‘ascent to the concrete’, the germ of an abstraction develops into a form which can be used to explain reality. It depends on the “disclosure of contradictions between the aspects of a relationship that is established in an initial abstraction”.

Relevant for ‘task design’, e.g. topic ‘multiplying by a number between 0 and 1’.

Learner probably thinks multiplying makes a number bigger – exploit this contradiction.

Leont’ev, Saxe and Wertsch on goals and actions

To Leont’ev goals are the raison d’être of an activity but Saxe’s emergent goals are little ‘must do’ things that come into being during activity and usually pass away.Activity theory is generally viewed with regard to activity systems á là Engeström - they are large scale systems. A school qualifies as an activity system, a sequence of lessons does not. This remark applies to Leont’ev’s version of activity theory too but Leont’ev introduces: activity, actions, operations and goals can be viewed with regard to actions. Tool use is essential to actions and operations.

Wertsch is another ‘micro activity theorist’. He says a lot about mediational means (MM- tools, artefacts, conventions) and actions. 2 are:

1)Not so much humans as humans with MM

2)MM transform (mathematical) actions

Going back to ‘multiplying by a number between 0 and 1’ – quite different depending on the tool you use to do it with.

French didactics (Artigue, Chevallard, Laborde, Lagrange, Rabardel, Trouche – others)

Instrumented activity

Distinguishes between a tool, as a material object, and an instrument as a psychological construct: “the instrument does not exist in itself, it becomes an instrument when the subject has been able to appropriate it for himself and has integrated it with his activity.”.”.Resonates with Marxist views that tools are simultaneously ideal and material.

‘Instrumental genesis’ – the process of turning an artefact into an instrument. Different, in general, for learners and teachers.

Knowledge and institution

Knowledge lives in institutions (could read ‘communities of practice’). Contrast knowledge generated by research mathematicians and the ‘same’ knowledge reproduced in schools! A lot of values come in, e.g. knowledge to be taught, from people who work for, say, QCA. The teacher comes in – contrast ‘knowledge to be taught’ with ‘taught knowledge’. The learner comes in – contrast ‘knowledge taught’ with ‘knowledge learnt’. All this makes one very careful about speaking of ‘knowledge’.

Task, technique, technology (talk) and theory

Tasks and techniques are problematised: tasks are artefacts which that are constructed (and reconstructed) in institutions; techniques are not simply technical manipulations but are institutionally privileged to the extent that only one, of many possible techniques, may be considered.

Two aspects of tasks and techniques: (i) nothing natural about specific tasks or techniques (there are many things we can do and, invariably, many ways to do them); (ii) social values are attributed to specific tasks and techniques. We differentiate between pragmatic and epistemic values of techniques. Pragmatic values concern the efficiency, or breadth of application, of a technique. Epistemic values concern the role of techniques in facilitating mathematical understanding.

Re ‘multiplying by a number between 0 and 1’ – I might introduce a technique of multiplying by 0.3 as multiplying by 3 and dividing by 10 (and dividing by 10 as moving the decimal point). Done correctly this has pragmatic value. Whether it has epistemic value depends!

Our little project

Teachers’ use of spreadsheets to enhance pupils’ mathematics subject knowledge in KS2 & KS3

Aims:

  1. To encourage cross-school and cross-phase teacher collaboration with regard to the use of ICT in mathematics in KS2 and KS3.
  2. To investigate teachers’ foci in the use of ICT in maths in KS2 & 3.
  3. To investigate curricula opportunities and constraints with regard to the use of ICT in maths in KS2 & 3.
  4. To investigate issues concerning ICT-maths task design in KS2 & 3.
  5. To investigate student engagement with maths in ICT-maths tasks in KS2 & 3 and aspects of their understanding of maths.
  6. To facilitate within-school continued professional development through focused reflections on task design and lesson observations.

University teamJohn M, John T, Patricia George

Schools triad 1 secondary teacher, 2 primary teachers

Schools triad 2secondary teacher, 2 primary teachers

Focus had to be on teachers but …

… our belief that studies of teachers’ use of ICT (or, indeed, any resource) cannot be conducted without a simultaneous focus on pupils’ learning.

The emphasis on ‘mathematics subject knowledge’ reflects project teachers’ concerns that proposed project activities must be related to supporting subsequent learning within each school.

Two main work stages – May-July and October-November. Teachers (in 3s) will plan and then teach a sequence of lessons based around the use of spreadsheets. We will monitor their task design and their perceptions of curricula opportunities and constraints. Six pupils from each class will be observed in detail.Screen capture software together with audio recordings will be used to collect data. Lessons will be video-recorded. Lessons will be mutually observed and a debrief will follow (audio-reorded).

OK, so how do theoretical ideas enter?

Well, a lot of ‘French’ foci:

knowledge tasks – techniques, instrumental genesis institution

How do teachers from each phase (school/institution) approach the design of tasks? What knowledge and what instrumented techniques do: teachers build into their tasks; do pupils realise? Monitoring the development of teachers’ and pupils’ instrumental genesis. Do the pupils actually do/learn what the teachers expected? (is maths knowledge enhanced?)

Re Saxe, Wertsch and Davydov

Monitoring teachers’ emergent goals in lessons – what, why and how do they lead pupils to knowledge?

Focus on the what and why of pupils’actions and what knowledge they lead to:

pragmatic and epistemic values of techniques

  • and where, if anywhere, they lead to

their epistemic actions and do they lead to abstractions

(and if so, do these abstractions reside in this tool use)

NB the underlined bits may be beyond what this project can do

1