posted on 2014-02-28, 14:11authored byChristian Greiffenhagen, Wes Sharrock
In the last three decades there have been a variety of studies of what is
often referred to as ‘everyday’ or ‘street’ mathematics. These studies have
documented a rich variety of arithmetic practices involved in activities such as
tailoring, carpet laying, dieting, or grocery shopping. More importantly, these studies
have helped to rectify outmoded models of rationality, cognition, and (school)
instruction.
Despite these important achievements, doubts can be raised about the ways in which
theoretical conclusions have been drawn from empirical materials. Furthermore, while
these studies rightly criticised prevalent theories of rationality and cognition as too
simplistic to account for everyday activities, it seems that some of the proposed
alternatives suffer from similar flaws (i.e., are straightforward inversions of the to-beopposed
theories, rather than more nuanced views on complicated issues).
In this article we illustrate our sceptical view by discussing four case studies in Jean
Lave’s pioneering and influential ‘Cognition in Practice’ (1988). By looking at the
case studies in detail, we investigate how Lave’s conclusions relate to the empirical
materials and offer alternative characterisations. In particular, we question whether
the empirical studies demonstrate the existence of two different kinds of mathematics
(‘everyday’ and ‘school’, or ‘formal’ and ‘informal’) and whether school instruction
tries to replace the former with the latter.
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Citation
GREIFFENHAGEN, C. and SHARROCK, W., 2008. School mathematics and its everyday other? Revisiting Lave's 'Cognition in Practice'. Educational Studies in Mathematics, 69 (1), pp. 1 - 21