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Re: [xmca] a minus times a plus



Andy:

Perhaps this is helpful, perhaps not.  The military conducts exercises 
with recruits that place them in extremely stressful situations.  Swimming 
in frigid water,high altitudes, etc. and then asks them to do mundane 
exercises (sort cards, say the alphabet, multiplication tables, etc.). 
Those who fail these mundane exercises do not suffer deficits but rather 
have a profundity for their brains to resort to basic survival mode and 
abort any attempt of higher psychological functioning.  Anxiety has a huge 
influence on how people's higher psychological functions work and as any 
CHATer would know anxiety is tied to the socio-cultural-history of a given 
activity.  Steve is on the right track to bring up Davidov's notion of 
backward tracking but yes I find the explanation to be Piaget in nature 
but not piaget in concept.  Perhaps it is piaget in nature because 
intellectuals at a certain level of development speak in very scope and 
sequence methodology regardless of their philosophical underpinnings.

eric




Andy Blunden <ablunden@mira.net>
Sent by: xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu
06/29/2009 02:59 AM
Please respond to ablunden; Please respond to "eXtended Mind, Culture, 
Activity"

 
        To:     "eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity" <xmca@weber.ucsd.edu>
        cc: 
        Subject:        Re: [xmca] a minus times a plus


One thing I am learning is that solving a specialised 
psychological problem (deficit in maths, or stroke injury), 
seems to encounter problems of a more general psychological 
character that stand in the way of a solution. I have asked 
my brother to see if he can determine more precisely what it 
is that Marissa is not understanding. Perhaps if we can get 
hold of this missing information, then a short-term solution 
at least can be found. And perhaps that dialogue will open 
up some more oportunities.

thanks for people's advice! It is much appreciated.
Andy

tvmathdude@aol.com wrote:
>>From what I have seen, there is a need to find a point where the train 
left the track. 
> 
> 
> 
> In the US, homeschool parents have relied on John Saxon's mathematics 
series. Called Saxonmath, I believe that Houghlin Mifflin is currently 
printing the books. John believed in short lessons that built upon each 
other through applications. You might be able to look at various levels 
through your local or college library and the international loan system. 
Your  might start at grade six and see the extent of your daughters 
understanding and then work up or down as need.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> What your responders and I seem to agree on is a simple fact...most 
teachers of mathematics are pedagogically sound but psychologically week. 
They have little understanding of how learning takes place and how each of 
their students learns differently. When I switched from teaching algebra 
the teaching people, my success rate went from 45% to over 70%.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> I'd look to see how your daughter has learned in the areas in which she 
has been successful and look for possible analogous methods that might 
apply to mathematics. 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Many tears ago, in a course in counseling, a substitute instructor 
announced to the class "No matter what you teach, I can do a better job." 
I now understand what he meant.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Let's look at a plus (intelligence) times a plus (the right method).
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Roger Breen
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: David H Kirshner <dkirsh@lsu.edu>
> To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity <xmca@weber.ucsd.edu>
> Sent: Sun
> , Jun 28, 2009 10:36 am
> Subject: RE: [xmca] a minus times a plus
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Steve,
> Whereas the advice seems sound, it strikes me as much more in the 
> Piagetian/constructivist genre than in the Vygotskyan/sociocultural 
genre. Do we 
> make any educational use of Vygotsky's insight that learning comes about 
through 
> internalization of social processes, or is this just a general 
characterization 
> of how development progresses. When it comes time to teach specific 
conceptual 
> content (rather than broad methods) we become Piagetians.
> David 
> 
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu [mailto:xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu] 
On Behalf 
> Of Steve Gabosch
> Sent: Sunday, June 28, 2009 8:58 AM
> To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
> Subject: Re: [xmca] a minus times a plus
> 
> Andy, the following from Leontiev I happened to be reading tonight 
> spurs a thought that might pertain to kids and adults when they get 
> "stuck" when learning.  Maybe this has some relevance to the situation 
> you are speaking of.  Just stabbing in the dark, of course. 
> Interesting idea in any case.
> 
> Leontiev talks about returning students to an **earlier** stage of a 
> learning process when they may have not have yet fully reorganized 
> their use of external operations into the new kinds of internal mental 
> required for the next stage.  One step backwards creates the 
> possibility for steps forward, so to speak.
> 
> These paragraphs are from your new version of Leontiev's book, 
> Development of Mind, pages 392-393
> , at the end of the last essay, The 
> Child's Psychological Development and Mental Deficiency.  As the notes 
> explain, this is the text of a lecture AN Leontiev gave to a World 
> Health Organization seminar in Milan in 1959.
> 
> I find this to be an interesting idea, that sometimes we need to go 
> backwards and reorganize old methods before being able to competently 
> proceed to new processes.  Hmmm.  Come to think of it, this sounds 
> like something I wind up doing a lot!  LOL
> 
> 
> Leontiev:
> 
> "To explain what I mean, let me cite a simple experiment I once
> made in a school for mentally backward children.
> 
> "I drew attention to the fact that the pupils, while doing mental
> addition, were using their fingers for it in a concealed way. Then I
> asked for several saucers, gave two to each pupil, and told them to
> hold them above the desk while they were giving their answers. In
> these conditions it proved that the operation of adding numbers
> broke down completely in most of them. More detailed analysis indi-
> cated that these children had in fact remained at the stage, as regards
> addition, of the external operations of 'counting by ones', and had
> not passed to the next stage. They therefore could not advance in
> learning arithmetic beyond actions within the first ten numbers with-
> out special help. For that purpose it was necessary, not to take them
> further, but on the contrary to return them first to the original stage
> of developed external operations, to 'reduce' these operations p
> rop-
> erly and to transfer them to the oral plane, in short to build a 
> capacity
> 'to count in their head' all over again.
> 
> "Research has shown that such a reorganisation is actually possible
> even when working with children of quite pronounced mental back-
> wardness. It is specially important that this approach has the effect, 
> in
> cases of a slight lag in mental development, of completely eliminating
> it.
> 
> "Such intervention in the forming of mental operations of some
> kind or other must, of course, be prompt and timely, because other-
> wise the forming of the process cannot proceed further normally be-
> cause the stage of its forming has sometimes not been built up by
> chance or has been built up incorrectly, with the result that an im-
> pression of alleged mental incapacity in the child is created."
> 
> <end of quote>
> 
> - Steve
> 
> 
> 
> On Jun 27, 2009, at 11:00 PM, Andy Blunden wrote:
> 
>> I hope people won't mind if I continue to pick the brains of this 
>> list on the problem of my niece's progress in maths, or lack of it.
>>
>> It seems that the suggestion last time - that Marissa may have 
>> missed important lessons while on holiday - may explain her poor 
>> performance last year in maths, even though maths has always been 
>> her weak subject. She has caught up a bit but she is still badly 
>> behind.
>>
>> It seems that the issue Mike has raised also applies: she is getting 
>> homework that seem to presume she know things that in fact she 
>> doesn't
> . The only other negative in her school reports is that she 
>> doesn't participate in class discussion or ask questions when she 
>> doesn't understand something.
>>
>> I presume the hesitancy about speaking up is probably the cause of 
>> failure to correct her maths problems and the teachers giving her 
>> homework she doesn't understand.
>>
>> She is now 15 and her maths homework is also beyond her father! :) 
>> and the crisis of the transition from childhood to adulthood around 
>> this age, makes it impossible for the father to get Marissa talk 
>> about it to him, or engage Marissa in games of 20 Questions or 
>> something to lead her to the joys of asking others. Discussion over 
>> the dinner table is apparently also unconducive to her participation.
>>
>> Does anyone have any ideas? I've run out of suggestions. I could 
>> probably help if I was there, but I'm 1000 km away.
>>
>> Andy
>>
>> Mike Cole wrote:
>>> SO glad you are interested in this, Jay.
>>> I have just made contact with Karen Fuson who has, lucky for us, 
>>> "retired"
>>> from Northwestern and moved nearby. She is away for a week or so
>>> but then we are getting together. This is a problem that just may be
>>> tractable, theoretically interesting for sure, attractive of 
>>> experience
>>> collaborators,
>>> and god knows, of practrical importance to lots of kids.
>>> mike
>>> On Sun, Jun 7, 2009 at 3:27 PM, Jay Lemke <jaylemke@umich.edu> wrote:
>>>> Yes, Mike and F.K., these are
>  very disturbing issues. Both that 
>>>> what we
>>>> think we want to teach seems to depend on deeper (e.g. 4000-year 
>>>> deep)
>>>> knowledge than it's realistic to expect most people to learn (or 
>>>> want to
>>>> learn), and that how we teach even the most practical bits of 
>>>> mathematics
>>>> (like 15 minus 8) seems to have gone so wrong that it's hard to 
>>>> know where
>>>> to start, especially for those we have most systematically failed.
>>>> We do indeed need to not give up. But we also need, I think, to 
>>>> admit that
>>>> it's time to seriously re-think the whole of the what, why, and 
>>>> how of
>>>> education. Math is a nice place to focus because at least some of 
>>>> it seems
>>>> universally agreed to be useful by almost everyone, because 
>>>> professional
>>>> mathematicians and most people, including teachers and mathematics
>>>> educators, seem to hold radically different views about what the 
>>>> subject is,
>>>> and because success in teaching it, measured in almost any way, is 
>>>> pretty
>>>> near the bottom of the heap.
>>>>
>>>> Yes, we can find somewhat better ways to teach the same stuff, but 
>>>> maybe
>>>> it's the stuff itself (the content of the curriculum, viewed not 
>>>> just as
>>>> information, but as activity) that needs to be rethought? along 
>>>> with the
>>>> ethics and efficacy of who decides.
>>>>
>>>> No matter how many times you multiply a minus by any number of 
>>>> pluses, you
>>>> still get
>  a minus.
>>>> JAY.
>>>>
>>>>  Jay Lemke
>>>> Professor
>>>> Educational Studies
>>>> University of Michigan
>>>> Ann Arbor, MI 48109
>>>> www.umich.edu/~jaylemke
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Jun 6, 2009, at 6:12 PM, Mike Cole wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hi Foo Keong-- It is so generous of you to even try to explain! 
>>>> And your
>>>> question re math seems to me
>>>> relevant to other areas of knowledge as well when you ask, "Can we
>>>> condensefour thousand years of
>>>> human development into an easily digestible four minutes for 
>>>> learners."
>>>>
>>>> Could we consider four years, just for whole numbers? Davydov 
>>>> starts with
>>>> Algebra as the gateway arithmetic. Jean Schmittau, Peter Moxhay 
>>>> and others
>>>> believe his method of introducing youngesters to math has some 
>>>> extra power.
>>>> As I understand it, others on xmca are dubious and look to other 
>>>> sources of
>>>> difficulty. Karen Fuson, in her article on "developing 
>>>> mathematical power
>>>> ins whole number operations" focuses on introducing number 
>>>> operations
>>>> through very simple, familiar, imaginable,
>>>> events where exchange is involved.
>>>>
>>>> Its odd to me experiencing the cycle of time, the "coming back to 
>>>> the
>>>> beginning and recognizing it
>>>> for the first time" that is happening for me right now with 
>>>> arithmetic and
>>>> early algebra. The source
>>>> is quite practical with social significance: the unbridgable gap the
>>>> children I work with face between
>>>> what their teachers
>  are teaching about (say) subtraction (2005-118 
>>>> is my
>>>> current keystone example)
>>>> trying to get their kids to learn that the first step is to 
>>>> subtract 8 from
>>>> 15 and know enough to treat the
>>>> second zero as a 9. But the child, even understanding that the 
>>>> task the
>>>> teacher is focused on is
>>>> disabled because when asked 15-8 the answer =3 and only painstaking
>>>> attention to the problem set up with fingers and subtracting one 
>>>> by one,
>>>> with full compliance and even eagerness by the child, brings
>>>> her to 7.
>>>>
>>>> Now suppose this phenomenon is ubiquitous, affects 100's of 
>>>> thousands of
>>>> children, and is heavily correlated with social class.
>>>>
>>>> Then ....  ??? ....
>>>> I think my frustration is probably equivalent to yourse in 
>>>> intensity, but
>>>> the quality is of a somewhat different nature.
>>>> mike
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Sat, Jun 6, 2009 at 3:11 AM, Ng Foo Keong <lefouque@gmail.com> 
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> I was trained in mathematics at the University of Cambridge (UK)
>>>>
>>>> for my undergraduate studies, concentrating more on pure
>>>>
>>>> mathematics (including algebra).  I am able to roll out a
>>>>
>>>> rigorous abstract proof of why "minus times minus" is a "plus",
>>>>
>>>> using only the basic axioms of real numbers (actually you only
>>>>
>>>> need a few of those axioms).
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> However, abstract proofs aren't likely to be useful for non-math
>>>>
>>>> specialists and struggling neophyte learners=2
> 0of algebra.  in
>>>> order to pull off such a proof, or even just to understand just
>>>>
>>>> the few lines of proof, you almost need to be a mental masochist.
>>>>
>>>> Who likes to go through mental torture?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Can we condense four thousand years of human development of
>>>>
>>>> mathematical understanding into an easily digestible four minutes
>>>>
>>>> for learners?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> thus the huge gulf of understanding still persists.  that's why
>>>>
>>>> as an educator, i feel so useless being unable to help other
>>>>
>>>> people.   :-(
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> F.K.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> 2009/6/4 Mike Cole <lchcmike@gmail.com>:
>>>>
>>>> I am currently reading article by Fuson suggestion by Anna Sfard 
>>>> on whole
>>>>
>>>> number operations. I also need to study Anna's paper with exactly 
>>>> this
>>>>
>>>> example in it. Not sure what moment of despair at deeper 
>>>> understanding
>>>>
>>>> hit
>>>>
>>>> me. Now that I am done teaching and have a whole day to communicate
>>>>
>>>> things
>>>>
>>>> are looking up!! Apologies for doubting I could have deep 
>>>> understanding
>>>>
>>>> of
>>>>
>>>> why minus x minus = plus and minus x plus = minus. At present my
>>>>
>>>> understanding remains somewhat bifurcated. The former is negation 
>>>> of a
>>>>
>>>> negation as david kel long ago suggested, linking his suggestion to
>>>>
>>>> Anna's
>>>>
>>>> comognition
>>>>
>>>> approach. The second I think more of in terms of number line and
>>>>
>>>> multiplication as repeated addition.
>>>>
>>>> 20Perhaps the two will coalesce under your combined tutelage.
>>>>
>>>> mike
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> And member book links are coming in. Nice.
>>>>
>>>> mike
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
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>> -- 
>> 
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