ENGLISH FOR MATH_Page Four
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Chapter 2
3.
The
Value of Mathematics
MATHEMATIC EDUCATION
(Pendidikan Matematika)
1. Philosophy of Mathematics Education
Philosophy of mathematics
education covers the review of some central problems of mathematics education:
its ideology, its foundation and its aim. It also serves a more insight into
the nature of its aspects: the nature of mathematics, the value of mathematics,
the nature of student, the nature of learning, the nature of teaching of
mathematics, the nature of teaching learning resources, the nature of
assessment, the nature of school mathematics, the nature of students’ learn
mathematics. In order to have a clear picture of the role of the study of
philosophy of mathematics and its relationship to activities, it may be
discussed about the nature of human resources development and the nature of
lesson study in mathematics education.
2.
2. The
Nature of Mathematics and School Mathematics
Mathematics ideas comprise thinking framed by markers in
both time and space. However, any two individuals construct time and space
differently, which present difficulties for people sharing how they see things.
Further, mathematical thinking is continuous and evolutionary, whereas
conventional mathematics ideas are often treated as though they have certain
static qualities. The task for both teacher and students is to weave these
together. We are again face with the problem of oscillating between seeing
mathematics extra-discursively and seeing it as a product of human activity
(Brown, T, 1994).
In the contemporary times, the mathematical backbone
of its value has been extensively investigated and proven over the past ten years.
According to Dr. Robert S. Hartman’s, value is a phenomena or concept, and the
value of anything is determined by the extent to which it meets the intent of
its meaning. Hartman (1945) indicated that the value of mathematics has four
dimensions: the value of its meaning, the
value of its uniqueness, the value of its purpose, and the value of its function. Further, he suggested that these four
“Dimensions of Value” are always referred to as the following concepts: intrinsic value, extrinsic value, and systemic value. The bare intrinsic and
inherent essence of mathematical object is a greater, developed intensity of
immediacy. Mathematical object is genuinely independent either of consciousness
or of other things; something for itself. In and for itself belongs to the Absolute alone,
mathematical object can be perceived as the developed result of its nature and
as a system of internal relations in which it is independent of external
relations.
4.
The
Nature of Students
Understanding
the nature and characteristics of young adolescent development can focus effort
in meeting the needs of these students. The National Middle School Association
(USA, 1995) identified the nature of students in term of their intellectual,
social, physical, emotional and psychological, and moral. Young adolescent
learners
are curious, motivated to achieve when challenged and capable of
problem-solving and complex thinking. There is an intense need to belong and be
accepted by their peers while finding their own place in the world. They are
engaged in forming and questioning their own identities on many levels. The
students may mature at different rates and experience rapid and irregular
growth, with bodily changes causing awkward and uncoordinated movements. In
term of emotional and psychological
aspect, they are vulnerable and self-conscious, and often experience
unpredictable mood swings. While in the case of moral, they are idealistic and want to have an impact on making
the world a better place.
3.
The Aim
of Mathematics Education
Philosophically, the
aims of mathematics education stretch from the movement of back to basic of arithmetics teaching,
certification, transfer of knowledge, creativity, up to develop students
understanding. Once upon a time, a mathematics teacher delivered his notion
that the objective of his mathematical lesson was to use better mathematical,
more advance terminology and to grasp a certain concept of mathematics. Other
teacher claimed that the objective of his mathematical lesson was to achieve
notions stated in the syllabi. While others may state that his aim was to get
true knowledge of mathematics. So the
purpose of mathematics education should be enable students to realize,
understand, judge, utilize and sometimes also perform the application of
mathematics in society, in particular to situations which are of significance
to their private, social and professional lives (Niss, 1983, in Ernest, 1991).
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