Midas Syndrome? Commognition as a Lens for Research on how Stem Sentences Feature in a Primary Mathematics Classroom

Item

Title
Midas Syndrome? Commognition as a Lens for Research on how Stem Sentences Feature in a Primary Mathematics Classroom
Description
This article outlines how commognition - communication and cognition - (Sfard, 2008) was utilised as a theoretical lens to guide doctoral research. My doctoral research aims to make sense of stem sentences, which are speaking scaffolds used in primary mathematics classrooms in England. I challenge an oversimplified narrative between mathematical thinking and communication, which endorses stem sentences as faultless discursive objects or d-objects – a narrative Dr. Anna Sfard names ‘Midas syndrome’ (Sfard, 2019, p. 98). Contrary to popular opinion, stem sentences are not faultless and how they feature in everyday classroom discourse is not well documented. My significant contribution to knowledge is a critical stance towards an endorsed-by-many practice and an evaluation of the utility of theory to analyse audio-visual data from the primary mathematics classroom. To support my argument, I outline an episode of classroom observation which features commognitive conflict, where stem sentences also feature, and how a class teacher expertly navigates a learner towards a mathematical realisation through visual mediation. The article is structured using guiding principles which exemplify and evaluate the appropriateness of commognition – gathered from Sfard’s seminal work ‘Thinking as communicating: Human development, the growth of discourses, and mathematising’ (2008) and related works – and the impact on my doctoral research when observing communication-in-situ in multilingual primary mathematics classrooms.
Creator
Kassim-Lowe, Tazreen
Subject
Stem sentences
discursive objects
primary mathematics
commognition
multilingualism
Publisher
CERJ, Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge
Cambridge Educational Research e-Journal
Date
2024-12-20T12:34:33Z
2024-12-01
Type
Article
Format
application/pdf
Identifier
https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/377844
https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.114533
Language
eng
Rights
Attibution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported Licence (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 DEED)
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/