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Does “African” mathematics facilitate access to mathematics? Towards an ongoing critical analysis of ethnomathematics in a South African context

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Horsthemke, Kai ; Schäfer, Marc:
Does “African” mathematics facilitate access to mathematics? Towards an ongoing critical analysis of ethnomathematics in a South African context.
In: Pythagoras : journal of the Association for Mathematics Education of South Africa, AMESA. 65 (Juni 2007). - S. 2-9.
ISSN 1012-2346

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Kurzfassung/Abstract

Mosibudi Mangena, the Minister of Science and Technology, said in an address to the Annual Congress of the South African Mathematical Society at the University of the Potchefstroom, November 2, 2004: “There is one thing we need to address before anything else. We need to increase the number of young people, particularly blacks and women, who are able to successfully complete the first course in Mathematics at our universities.” How is this to be achieved? A popular trend involves a call for the introduction and incorporation of so-called ethnomathematics, and more particularly ‘African mathematics’, into secondary and tertiary curricula. Although acknowledging the obvious benefits of socalled ethnomathematics, this paper critically analyses three aspects of ethnomathematics that have been neglected in past critiques. Our focus is not on the relationship as such between ethnomathematics and mathematics education. Our critique involves (1) epistemological and logical misgivings, (2) a new look at practices and skills, (3) concerns about embracing ‘African mathematics’ as valid and valuable – just because it is African. The first concern is about problems relating to the relativism and appeals to cultural specificity that characterise ethnomathematics, regarding mathematical knowledge and truth. The second set of considerations concern the idea that not all mathematical practices and skills are necessarily culturally or socially embedded. With regard to the validity and viability of ‘African mathematics’, our misgivings not only concern the superficial sense of ‘belonging’ embodied in the idea of a uniquely and distinctly African mathematics, and the threat of further or continuing marginalisation and derogation, but the implicitly (self-)demeaning nature of this approach. This paper serves as a reminder that a critical position in the deliberations of ethnomathematics needs to be sustained. It warns against the bandwagon syndrome in a society where political correctness has become a prominent imperative. This paper is framed by many unanswered questions in an attempt to inspire and sustain a critical discourse in the ethnomathematics movement.

Weitere Angaben

Publikationsform:Artikel
Schlagwörter:African mathematics; ethnomathematics; mathematics education; South Africa
Institutionen der Universität:Philosophisch-Pädagogische Fakultät > Pädagogik > Lehrstuhl für Bildungsphilosophie und Systematische Pädagogik
Peer-Review-Journal:Ja
Verlag:Assoc.
Die Zeitschrift ist nachgewiesen in:
Titel an der KU entstanden:Nein
KU.edoc-ID:20543
Eingestellt am: 20. Sep 2017 13:31
Letzte Änderung: 20. Sep 2017 13:31
URL zu dieser Anzeige: https://edoc.ku.de/id/eprint/20543/
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