Original Research

Keeping sites in sight: Conversations with teachers about the design of toolkits peculiar to a continuous professional development initiative

Faaiz Gierdien, Charles Smith, Cyril Julie
Pythagoras | Vol 40, No 1 | a475 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/pythagoras.v40i1.475 | © 2019 Faaiz Gierdien, Charles Smith, Cyril Julie | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 20 February 2019 | Published: 05 December 2019

About the author(s)

Faaiz Gierdien, Department of Curriculum Studies, Faculty of Education, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa
Charles Smith, School of Science and Mathematics Education, University of the Western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa
Cyril Julie, School of Science and Mathematics Education, University of the Western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa

Abstract

The aim of this article is to shift the notion of ‘sites’ as places of work peculiar to continuous professional development (CPD) to a theoretical level, independent of, yet intimately connected to, their physical meanings, for example universities and schools. Most CPD initiatives have to contend with at least one of these two sites, in which university-based mathematics educators and school teachers can have different and at times overlapping ways of talking about the same mathematics. Using research on number and operations, non-visually salient rules in algebra and algebraic fractions, and analytic tools and notions peculiar to conversation analysis and ethnomethodology, the authors identify and analyse site-related issues in the design of particular problem sets in Grade 8 and Grade 9 toolkits and related conversations between a mathematics educator and participating teachers. The article concludes with the implications of ‘keeping in sight’ ways in which universities and schools talk and work when it comes to designing and discussing toolkits.

Keywords

Continual professional development; mathematical toolkits; productive practice; algebraic fractions; visual syntax of algebra; equivalence; conversation analysis; ethnomethodology

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