14 results on '"Graven, Mellony"'
Search Results
2. A 20-year review of South African Early Grade Mathematics Research Articles.
- Author
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Morrison, Samantha, Graven, Mellony, Venkat, Hamsa, and Vale, Pamela
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PUBLISHED articles , *MULTILINGUALISM - Abstract
In this article we share the findings emanating from a 20 year (2003–2022) review of South African Early Grade Mathematics (EGM) research articles published in key international and local/regional journals. The review shows a substantial increase in the volume of published EGM articles in the second decade (2013–2022), nationally and internationally. These increases are marked across the key clusters of articles seen in our analysis: Teachers and Teaching, Learners and Learning, Language and Multilingualism, and Assessment. The emergence of the South African Journal of Childhood Education as a phase-specific journal in 2011 has been a particularly important factor within the increasing volume of publication. We note too, that whilst the base of publication across institutions has broadened in the local/regional publication space, international publications are tied primarily to projects linked with established South African Research Chairs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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3. SAARMSTE's role in building and connecting Early Grade Mathematics research: A review of SAARMSTE Proceedings 2003–2022.
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Graven, Mellony and Venkat, Hamsa
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SCIENCE education , *MATHEMATICS , *CONFERENCE papers , *RESEARCH personnel , *TECHNOLOGY education - Abstract
This paper focuses on the Southern African Association for Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education's (SAARMSTE's) role as a platform supporting research dissemination and connecting researchers in early grades mathematics (EGM) in the Southern African region. A review of the Long Papers in SAARMSTE over the last 20 years supports the finding of the other review papers in this Special Issue: that there has been substantial growth of attention to EGM since 2013. However, two distinctions are marked when looking at conference papers rather than journal papers. Firstly, there is a particularly large expansion of work in the last 5 years, with a broadening base of participation in this work. Second, looking across all the formats of conference presentations indicates SAARMSTE's role in supporting and building EGM as a key focus of research attention, and bringing together regional and international groups with interests in this area. Given that conference proceedings usually offer a broader picture of emerging interests than journal papers, we reflect on the range of foci of attention within EGM in the SAARMSTE Proceedings, and trends within this. These trends also help us to point to areas that are likely to be of key interest in the next decade. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. Grade R Teacher Expressions of Themselves as Teachers of Early Numeracy Participating in an Intervention Programme.
- Author
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Long, Roxanne and Graven, Mellony
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CAREER development , *TEACHER development , *CHILD development , *TEACHERS , *NUMERACY - Abstract
This paper explores Grade R teacher expressions of themselves as teachers of numeracy, and as teachers working in the transition phase of schooling, after their participation in a research-informed numeracy-focused professional development (PD) intervention. The Early Number Fun (ENF) programme had 33 teachers from 17 Eastern Cape schools participating monthly over 18 months. Inclusion of Grade R to schooling is relatively new following policy changes in Early Childhood Development. In-service support tends to be subsumed within the Foundation Phase without attention to the specialised nature of Grade R that emphasises learning through play. ENF focused on the development of specialised teacher knowledge to support the development of early number sense through play, particularly with conceptual manipulatives. Data sources include three pre-, during, and post-PD questionnaires. Findings reveal that participation in ENF, and access to multiple research informed numeracy resources, supported teachers in their relationship with numeracy and the teaching thereof. Questionnaire responses indicate greater confidence in themselves as knowledgeable teachers of numeracy and that belonging to the ENF community supported navigation of positive professional identities within the mixed messages of policy. The findings contribute to the community-supported field of Grade R PD research and early numeracy teaching and learning. In concluding we discuss implications of this research for Grade R PD and for policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. How Pre-service Teachers Reflect on their own Mathematics Teaching Practice Compared with the Practice of Others.
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Chikiwa, Samukeliso and Graven, Mellony
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STUDENT teachers , *TEACHER education , *INVESTIGATION reports , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Reflective practice is a crucial element of professional growth that is gaining in popularity in teacher education, yet the ability to reflect is a skill that is neither natural nor easy to develop. This paper reports on an investigation that sought to establish if pre-service teachers at a South African university – in the process of learning to reflect on practice through analysing video-recorded lessons – reflected differently when reflecting on their own practice from the way they reflected on the practice of other teachers. Pre-service teachers were introduced to the Six Lens Framework as a tool to aid reflection on mathematics teaching. The authors compared two sets of reflections written by four pre-service teachers (PSTs) who participated in the study. One set was based on a video-recorded lesson of another teacher's practice while the other was based on a video-recording of their own practice. The study found that the PSTs' reflections in both cases were generally at the lowest level of the reflection spectrum. They mostly described classroom events rather than analysing the lessons to provide explanation suggestions, or reflectivity. We found, however, that all four PSTs reflected at substantially greater length on their own lessons than on those of other teachers. Furthermore, three of the four teachers' reflections on their own practice focused on mathematical rather than general aspects and provided more suggestions for improvement than their reflections on the practice of other teachers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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6. Rituals and explorations in mathematical teaching and learning: introduction to the special issue.
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Heyd-Metzuyanim, Einat and Graven, Mellony
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MATHEMATICS education , *CRITICAL theory , *SOCIAL theory - Abstract
This special issue comprises seven studies and a commentary piece, which relate to various aspects of rituals and the "ritual-exploration" dyad in learning, teaching and learning-to-teach mathematics. The theme of the special issue arose from Sfard and Lavie's (Cognition and Instruction, 23(2), 237–309, 2005) "ritual" vs. "explorative" dyad, on which a Working Session was held during the PME conference in 2016. Three central themes are addressed in the papers of this special issue: (1) the logic of ritual, and why rituals are so persistent in mathematics classrooms; (2) the co-existence of rituals and explorations, including the question of whether rituals and explorations are a binary or a continuum; and (3) alternative theoretical conceptualisations of the ritual-exploration dyad, focusing in particular on what can be learned about rituals from social and critical theory, as well as socio-linguistics. In this introduction, we first give an overview of each of the papers and its unique contribution. We then synthesise the answers given by the papers to the three themes described above. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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7. Exploratory mathematics talk in a second language: a sociolinguistic perspective.
- Author
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Robertson, Sally-Ann and Graven, Mellony
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SOCIOLINGUISTICS , *SECOND language acquisition , *NUMERACY , *LITERACY , *ENGLISH language , *MATHEMATICS education , *BILINGUALISM - Abstract
This paper illuminates challenges confronting teachers and students at the literacy/numeracy interface in contexts where students have not developed sufficient English language proficiency to be learning mathematics through English but, due to socio-politically and economically driven perceptions are being taught in English. We analyse transcript data of classroom talk in a South African grade 4 mathematics lesson on fractions. Together with interview data, the lesson data highlight some of the consequences students' diminished access to their home language appear to have on their access to mathematical meaning-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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8. Conceptualising the more knowledgeable other within a multi-directional ZPD.
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Abtahi, Yasmine, Graven, Mellony, and Lerman, Stephen
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MATHEMATICS education , *LEARNING - Abstract
From a Marxian/Vygotskian perspective, learning is social in origin and it happens in the presence of others that are more knowledgeable. Extending this view to the learning of mathematics, such learning also becomes inseparable from the presence of others (people and artefacts). Researchers over decades have studied different interactions to see how such learning with others occurs, what is the role of the (more knowledgeable) other, and if at all this role alternates between the participants. In this paper, we looked at a 5-year-old's (Lila) interaction with her mother (Mellony) and a television remote control as Lila attempted to count in threes using the three by three physical layout of the numbered buttons 1-9 on the remote control. We specifically looked at the emergence of the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) as Lila's attention was caught by the properties of the remote control and by her mother's questions. We also pay attention to how the role of the more knowledgeable other alternates among the participants. Our findings suggest that Lila, at times, used resources provided by the physical properties of the remote control and sometimes, used resources provided by Mellony to think about the task of counting in threes. In Lila's interaction, we interpreted a multi-directional ZPD as the role of the more knowledgeable other alternated between Mellony, Lila and the remote control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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9. Between people-pleasing and mathematizing: South African learners' struggle for numeracy.
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Heyd-Metzuyanim, Einat and Graven, Mellony
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MATHEMATICS education , *SOCIAL status , *STUDENT participation , *EDUCATION of minorities , *MATHEMATICAL ability testing , *DISCOURSE analysis , *STUDY & teaching of numeracy , *SECONDARY education - Abstract
The reported research attempts to trace possible reasons for third grade learners' limited progress in numeracy in a low socioeconomic status (SES) South African context. This is done through two lenses, both stemming from Sfard's commognitive (The term 'commognition' has been offered by Sfard as an amalgam of 'cognition' and 'communication,' thus expressing the unity of these concepts. Since its original appearance, some authors (including Sfard herself) have preferred using the word 'communicational' to describe Sfard's framework. We chose to stick with 'commognitive' because we believe it clearly points to the specific theoretical stance presented in Sfard , whereas 'communicational' might point to many other theories or frameworks that have something to do with human communication.) framework. One lens aims to analyze two learners' (Mina and Ronaldo (all names are pseudonyms)) mathematical and identity discourse both in one-on-one interviews and in a small group 'math club' lesson led by the second author. The other examines the mathematical milieu in which these learners have participated through the analysis of a school mathematics lesson which exemplifies prevalent instructional practices in this milieu. Relying on the distinction between ritual and explorative participation, we show that while Mina was acting in an extremely ritualized manner, Ronaldo was more explorative in his actions. However, the milieu, as seen in the school lesson, encouraged almost exclusively ritual participation. Thus, while Mina was identified as a good student, Ronaldo was identified as an outcast or 'troublemaker.' We conclude by drawing implications to the tenacious nature of rituals in the mathematics classroom and the effects that these rituals may have on students' identities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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10. Exploring South African mathematics teachers’ experiences of learner migration.
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Robertson, Sally-Ann and Graven, Mellony
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TRAINING of mathematics teachers , *STUDENT mobility , *TEACHING experience , *POST-apartheid era , *MATHEMATICS education , *PRIMARY education - Abstract
This paper focuses on patterns of post-apartheid learner migration between schools previously segregated along racial lines. South Africa’s shift away from cultural and linguistic isolationism and the ways this has impacted educational arrangements in this country, most particularly in relation to the language of learning and teaching, affects mathematics teaching and learning in complex ways. We focus on how changes in the demographic make-up of some schools have affected the teaching and learning of mathematics by drawing on two case study vignettes in historically different schools. The vignettes are used to illuminate our discussion and to raise key questions requiring further research. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2015
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11. Investigating mathematics teacher learning within an in-service community of practice: The centrality of confidence.
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Graven, Mellony
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MATHEMATICS , *LEARNING , *ETHNOLOGY , *CURRICULUM planning , *CURRICULUM , *TEACHER training - Abstract
This paper is part of a broader study that draws on Wenger's (Wenger, E.: 1998, Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning, and Identity, Cambridge University Press, New Work) social practice perspective to investigate teacher learning. The study extends Wenger's complex model of interrelated components of leaning (as meaning, practice, identity and community) to describe and explain teacher learning that occurs within a mathematics senior-phase in-service program that was stimulated by curriculum change. The study uses qualitative ethnography in which the researcher performs the dual role of both coordinator and researcher of the in-service practice. In a longitudinal study the phenomenon of confidence emerged in teachers' descriptions and explanations of their learning. In this paper I explore this phenomenon both empirically and theoretically. The extension of Wenger's (1998) theory to include the overarching and interacting component of confidence is embedded in and derived from data analysis of 10 teachers' learning, over a 2-year period, during a time of radical curriculum change. Since it would be incoherent within this framework to draw on psychological explanations of confidence I set out to explore confidence from within a social practice frame in a way that is grounded in data of the teachers in this study. The paper offers a concept of confidence in relation to teacher learning as 'learning as mastery', and confidence as both a product and a process of learning. Teachers can at once state their confidence as mathematics teachers, and their confidence to admit to what they do not know and still need to learn. It is argued that this is a primary condition for ongoing learning in a profession like mathematics teaching. In addition, the paper provides a critique of the applicability of Wenger's work to the context of teacher education and in particular highlights the absence of the notion of confidence within his work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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12. Correction to: exploratory mathematics talk in a second language: a sociolinguistic perspective.
- Author
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Robertson, Sally-Ann and Graven, Mellony
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MATHEMATICS education , *SOCIOLINGUISTICS - Abstract
The article "Exploratory mathematics talk in a second language: a sociolinguistic perspective", written by Sally-Ann Robertson and Mellony Graven, was originally published electronically on the publisher's internet portal (currently SpringerLink) on 16 August 2018 without open access. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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13. Correction to: Rituals and explorations in mathematical teaching and learning: introduction to the special issue.
- Author
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Heyd-Metzuyanim, Einat and Graven, Mellony
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MATHEMATICS education , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
The article "Rituals and explorations in mathematical teaching and learning: introduction to the special issue", written by Einat Heyd-Metzuyanim and Mellony Graven, was originally published electronically on the publisher's internet portal (currently SpringerLink) on 21 March 2019 without open access. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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14. Partnering with Districts to Expand an After-School Maths Club Programme.
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Stott, Debbie, Baart, Noluntu, and Graven, Mellony
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PRIMARY school teachers , *MATHEMATICS , *TEACHER development , *CAREER development - Abstract
A key intervention of the South African Numeracy Chair Project (SANCP) since 2011 has been the introduction of mathematics (or maths) clubs, which occur in the out-of-school time space. In 2016 the maths club concept was developed into a 15-week Pushing for Progression (PfP) teacher development programme which supports primary school mathematics teachers to run clubs beyond the SANCP local area. Expanding intervention models beyond local schools is imperative in the second phase of the SANCP (2016–2020). Working from a mixed methods methodological approach, the researchers collected pre- and post-data for a 4-operations assessment of the entire PfP programme. In this article they share learner data from one of the nine teachers who participated in the PfP maths club programme in the Uitenhague District, Eastern Cape, South Africa, to illuminate how partnerships between academics, district officials and teachers can enable powerful student learning in the club space. They argue further that within the tightly focused development programme run by teachers in this one district, it is possible for learners to make substantive progress in mathematical proficiency (MP) (especially procedural fluency and conceptual understanding) when comparing scores and learner methods between a pre- and post- assessment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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