One way of measuring the quality of research and development projects are through "impact factor" (that is, how many references do an article get). Therefore, I'm always happy when I get an email alerting me that someone has referenced one of my articles - because that means that the quality of my article has increased one notch.
A few days ago, for instance, I got an email from Google Scholar telling me that my eminent article "Teachers' conceptions of history of mathematics" had been referenced by the scholar Suphi Önder Bütüner in the article "Impact of Using History
of Mathematics on Students’ Mathematics Success: A Meta-Analysis Study".
It is nice to be referenced, especially in the rare event that it's not me or a close colleague who is the author of the referencing article. (Although maybe the author and I had a colleague in common.)
So which of my words of wisdom was picked up by Bütüner, thereby proving the quality of my research? The article is, as the title suggests, a meta-analysis, and - to make a short story short - it turns out that
Bütüner has read my article and concluded that my article is about history of mathematics but is not focusing on the pupils and their learning of mathematics. Therefore, my article is mentioned in a list of articles that are relevant to the field of study as a whole, but not to the specific problem that Bütüner wants to investigate. Therefore, my article is mentioned as one of the article not useful for the analysis.
Nonetheless, the quality of my article is higher than one week ago. In other cases, I have seen references to my work, but the researchers have cited me as saying something that I was quite unable to understand how the researchers could possibly think I was saying. Thus, the quality of my article (as measured by impact factor) have increased, even though it is patently impossible to understand what point I was trying to make.
Let me end by pointing out that the fact that impact factor is a quite imperfect way of measuring scientific quality, does not suggest that the system of counting articles used in Norway (with different points given based on the journals published in) is better. (As it happens, different articles in the same journal have an annoying tendency not to be of exactly the same scientific quality.)
(This blog post is a translation of a post in my Norwegian blog.)
Thursday, November 26, 2015
Thursday, March 5, 2015
NERA 2015 Day 2 #NERA2015GU
The second day of
NERA started off with parallel sessions, I chose the one on "Teacher's
work and teacher education". First, my colleagues Kirsten Thorsen and
Hanne Christensen talked on "Identity forming in teacher education".
They are part of a project TPQ (as am I), and their talk is based on data from
two of the sub-projects. The data involve surveys and in-depth interviews with students,
mentors and campus teachers. Students describe practice as the terrain -
authentic and unpredictable - in particular in the first year. They describe
campus learning as the map. The project started out with looking for "the
gap" to be able to bridge it - but the "gap" metaphor doesn't really
work if it is the terrain and the map. Peers are very important in both areas.
The practice mentors are seen as giving solutions, while teacher educators give
them theory.
Practice teachers do
not feel competent in theoretical themes, so they do not connect practice to
theory very much. They tend to focus on practical advice and discussions on
what works in practice.
Secondly, Roald
Tobiassen had a talk on "Portfolio as practice in teaching practicum:
promoting reflection and constructing teacher identity". The project was
connected to the teacher education that is called PPU in Norway, and a
part-time model. The portfolio was meant to scaffold students' practicum
learning and reflection. During the first year, the students had six
pedagogical texts to write, starting with "My pedagogical creed". The
students meet in groups of 4-6 students which discuss the tasks. This
particular project looked at six of the students.
Tobiassen went
quickly through a lot of the theory on portfolio. Then to the findings: these
six students were positive with regards to the portifolio - they saw it as a
way of developing teacher identity - they valued the authenticity.
"Portfolios helped me to see where I wanted to go and how to get
there". The six students were happy with the structure as well. They saw
the portfolio as a tool for connecting what they read about being a teacher and
their own experience.
Finally, Jóhanna
Karlsdóttir's theme was "Storyline som metode i inklusiv læring og
undervisning i praktik hos lærerstuderende". (Even though the title is in
Swedish, most of the words are understandable for the English reader, I
guess...) The study is based on one course in teacher education in Iceland,
with 21 participants (in 6th semester) - the data are interviews, notebooks,
discussions etc. The course is focused on inclusive education, which is
apparently not taught systematically in teacher education in Iceland. She
presented an eclectic mix of theories as a foundation for her work, including
Gardner, Johnson & Johnson etc. She then described the storyline process
(in the classical way). Her project goes on for one more year, but she has
found some room for improvement, for instance in getting to know the method
better before using it themselves. But storyline apparently is useful for
inclusive education as it is building on pupils' resources.
I do think that I
see more of why I do not like such a "broad" conference as much as
more focused conferences. I think the variety of participants makes it almost
impossible for those giving talks to present their projects effectively - it is
impossible to know which theories and concepts and contexts are well-known to
the people present. Thus, most presentations either spend too much time on
stuff I already know well or jump too quickly over theories I do not know. This
is in marked contrast to for instance the HPM conferences I go to every four
years.
Jane Kenway, Monash
University, had a plenary on "The emotional life of markets in
education". She presented a project looking at elite schools around the
world (but not generalizing educational policy based on these schools like
yesterday's speaker). Elite schools may be fee-based or merit-based (and
grant-funded). She talked on concepts such as "emotional geography"
(how do feelings connect to places) and "economies of emotion" (the
emotions of buying a Nike shoe is not connected to the smell and sound of the
shoe factory). What emotions are evoked by certain schools to make parents send
their pupils there?
She mocked the way
elite schools market themselves with cliche slogans. (It does remind me of a
student saying that she was so amazed of how teachers in her school in Uganda
always reminded their pupils that they are the future of Uganda. Cliche, yes,
but still an important reminder for the children. Isn't there too little -
rather than too much - talk of the importance of schooling in western
societies?)
While the subject of
elite schools is a bit interesting, to me it feels like it is on the edge of
what I'm interested in. I'm far more interested in how similar mechanisms are
working (or not) when "ordinary" schools are concerned. How do competition
for pupils influence the internal life of "ordinary",
"non-elite" schools. Perhaps ideas for studying this can be found
based on the study of the elite schools? Other characteristica of elite schools
are certainly less interesting in that context, for instance how parents use
relocation services to set up meetings with potential schools - not a very
common practice among parents relocating within Oslo, for instance. The high
pressure for performance in elite schools - the fail anxiety - is also
something that is far less usual in "ordinary" schools, I would
think.
A somewhat relevant
feature of elite schools is the development of new "departments"
tasked with producing emotions, for instance marketing departments. This is
also the case for many Norwegian institutions, for instance my own, with its
"avdeling for samfunnskontakt" which is trying to give HiOA a good
image and avoid bad press. (While trying to remember that an important part of
being a good institution in higher education is to encourage discussions and
enjoy the benefits of free speech, even when uncomfortable.)
After lunch, I went
to the parallel session on Classroom Research. Ingvill Krogstad Svanes
presented "Teachers' instructional practices during students' individual
seatwork in primary school". Her research is on six teachers in 3rd grade
in Norwegian - one week each. She presented an analytical framework developed
through the project. The main codes were instructional support, organizational
support, emotional support, monitoring and "no direct interaction with
students". One main finding is that there is a huge variation between the
teachers in how they spend their time. Two of the six teachers give more
instructional support than anything else. Others spend most of their time on
organizational support. This seem connected to the clarity of the initial
instructions and the choice of activities (scissors and glue lead to more need
of practical help, for instance). Emotional support was almost not present, but
that may be because only what was spoken was coded. Further subdivisions in the
codes show that even within the categories there are important differences -
some teachers are mostly telling the pupils, while others are challenging them
more. (For the sake of openness: I am Svanes' boss as well.)
Next, Malin Norberg
talked about "How do children in primary school make use of illustrations
in mathematics textbooks?" She chose subtraction as an example (an
interesting choice, as it is fairly difficult to illustrate in a static
picture). 1742 illustrations from 21 textbooks were the data, in addition to
discussions with twelve students about five illustrations. She has looked at
two subtraction situations: decrease and compare. 86.5 % of illustrations were
illustrating decrease. Sometimes the students need the illustration to do the
subtractions, in other instances the illustrations are just illustrating a
process.
Students sometimes
read more into the illustrations than intended, and sometimes they are able to
solve the mathematical task with symbols but not with the illustrations. (Not
all illustrations are very good...) The teacher's role is important. In her PhD,
she will work on teachers' role and teacher's guides.
For the last
scheduled talk in this session I decided to just listen instead of writing
notes - sorry...
After a coffee
break, I went for the parallel session on Gender and Education again. The first
talk was supposed to be by Jenny Bengtsson and Eva Bolander: "What the
school can (not) do: Education markets and negotiation on sex, risk and
schooling". However, this talk was cancelled...
The second talk of
this session was Chie Nakazawa's "Adolescents' norms, attitudes and values
regarding sexual and reproductive behaviours from a gender perspective - a
comparison between Japan and Sweden." The talk is based on surveys of
university students, about 500 in Sweden and about 2500 in Japan. One
indication of the difference: about a quarter of Japanese women in the study
claim never to have been interested in sex, while only 3.6 per cent of Sweden
women claim the same. I am quite sure that this is a cultural and not a
biological difference...
Also, only 2.4 per
cent of Swedish men say they are homosexual or bisexual, compared to 10.4 per
cent of Swedish women. This question was not even asked in Japan. Moreover, it
is clear that Swedes find sex to be more enjoyable and less dirty and embarrassing
than Japanese, if the survey answers are to be believed. Also on gender roles,
the differences are significant.
Thirdly, there was
the talk "A hotbed of heterosexuality? On the reproduction of notions of
sexuality in language instruction" by Angelica Simonsson. Her talk is
based on her ongoing PhD project. Her research question is whether sexuality
and gender normativity is constructed in language education instruction in
secondary school. She is looking both at teaching materials and at how pupils
and teachers relate to these. It is based on two classes (grade 8) in two
different schools, and the teaching aids used. Subjects: Swedish and English.
Her findings are
that sexuality figure in teaching aids, and these are all hetero. This goes for
both non-fiction films, fictional films, short stories and textbooks. There was
a total lack of non-heterosexual relationships. (This is quite surprising, as
my research show quite a bit of homosexuality in Norwegian textbooks. Does this
mean that Norwegian textbooks are more inclusive, or would a study of Norwegian
classrooms show a similar pattern, i.e. that teachers choose the heterosexual
examples?) (in a comment at the end of the session, it was argued that even
when gay characters are portrayed in literature for youth, they are portrayed
in a very stereotypical way. I have not looked at that in my material.)
Finally, the fourth
talk of the day was Per Nordén's "First Generation Rainbow Children Speak
Their Minds - How queer kinship structures matters in education". With
"rainbow children", he refers to children with one or more LGBT parent.
The talk is based on interviews with 28 rainbow people from age 15-37. He gave
long quotes from different stages of history. It is fascinating to see how
different experiences are, and that these are intimately connected to changes
in law and society. Sadly, he did not have the time to come to the part of
their school experiences.
That's the end of
the second day of NERA. Time for the last preparations for Friday morning's
talk...
Wednesday, March 4, 2015
NERA 2015 Day 1 #NERA2015GU
I will
"report" on my first NERA conference in the same way as I report on
other conferences I attend - through quick notes written throughout the
conference. The conference lasts for three days, and I am having a presentation
on Friday morning (and an early version is available on YouTube...) Hesitatingly, I will do the notes in English, as most of the presentations will
be in English, even though most participants are Swedish and Norwegian.
After registration
and lunch, the first thing on the programme was the opening, of course. Dean
Roger Säljö welcomed us and gave a brief introduction to the Faculty of
Education at the University of Gothenburg. There was also an introduction into
the research activities in the faculty.
The first plenary
talk was by professor Hugh Lauder, titled "The Repositioning of Education
in the 21st Century and what Can Be Done About It". His starting point was
the tightening bond between the economy and education in the 20th century - which
he claimed is now eroding. In some countries, education's only goal (in
political documents) is the economy. It has been assumed that education leads
to upwards mobility, but that is dependent on an increasing number of jobs at
the top (or downwards mobility on the top). Education is also seen as important
for global citizenship, but this is dependent on children seeing a future,
which they don't always see.
Now, there is an
increasing polarization in wealth and income, and there is an increasing
competition for a decreasing number of top jobs - the corporate ladders are now
flat. We see the emergence of a global education system which educates
multi-lingual multi-cultural candidates for transnational corporations. Those
not "talented" are hitting a glass ceiling. (The argument is
unconvincing, as education could certainly be economically worthwhile even
though it does not give top jobs in multi-national corporations...)
32 percent of the
poorest 10 per cent of British people are graduates - meaning that graduation
is not guarantee against poverty. An increasing percentage of graduates are
poor. (But again, this does not mean that education is not worthwhile for the
individual. And it certainly doesn't mean that education is not good for the
economy as a whole.) There is an insufficient supply of high skilled work.
(By the way, Lauder
is the kind of lecturer who has a Powerpoint with huge amounts of text which he
shows as he is saying something else. This doesn't work very well for me, maybe
because I'm not a native English speaker and reader...)
He ended by saying
that we cannot claim that education is there for the economy, what is then the
purpose of education and how can we then get funding for it? (But of course
humankind have discussed for thousands of years what education is for, so we do
have plenty of non-economic answers to that question.)
As I have said, I
don't find the arguments in this talk convincing - the numbers don't seem to
add up to the conclusions he is stating. The data are on the outcome for the
individuals, not for society. Perhaps the reasoning is better explained in his
book(s). (But as was commented later in the day - in that case it would be good
if he put his best arguments into his talk.)
Then, after a coffee
break with a conspicious lack of coffee, there was the first parallel sessions.
I went to the ICT & Education session, where three of my colleagues from
Oslo presented. But first, Ann-Katrin Perselli had a talk entitled "From
computer room to one-to-one". She described a phenomenological study with
four teachers from two upper secondary schools, in which all students had their
own computers. Among her findings: each student having a PC meant less fighting
for the computer lab, while PCs were also disturbing. Teachers based their
teachings on tips from colleagues, trial and error and websites - this was
time-consuming for inexperienced teachers. Good relationships with students and
teachers were a help. The study apparently shows how teachers' "lived
experience" influence their approach to using IT in teaching. School
leaders need to be aware that teachers are different.
Then, Bård Ketil
Engen and Louise Mifsud presented work on an online course on collaborative
learning activities - on master level. The course has been held for four years.
They discussed different ways of engaging students online, now using Adobe
Connect and Second Life. Asynchronous student collaboration was mediated via
Etherpad and Wiki. The semester is designed with student activities alternating
with online synchronous lectures, and finally there is an exam where students
write a paper on the work they have been doing.
Technology
influences communication. Students often get more passive online, and maybe a
bit uncertain. Asynchronously, we see that students start out cooperating
(dividing the labour) instead of collaborating. Overall, students are learning
about CSCL activities while learning about CSCL. (I happen to be the boss of
these fine teacher educators, a fact there's no reason to hide.)
Finally, Marianne
Vinje had a talk with the title "Teacher Strategies for Meaningful
Learning in a Blended Environment". Many challenges are facing higher
education - resources are moving away from teaching, and research is rated
higher than teaching. The role of instruction gets less important, teaching
complex (higher-order) thinking is more important. Technologies give endless
opportunities which have to be developed. One such opportunity is blended
learning, which is what Vinje has been working on, using a community of inquiry
(CoI)framework.
Teaching online is
something else than traditional teaching - other factors are important than in
traditional teaching. Studies show a change of many teachers from an
instructional mode of teaching to a more Socratic mode of learning. Also, many
teachers are more precise in their messages/information. Vinje thought blended
learning gave her more classroom time to get to know her students.
As the last stop of
the day, I chose the parallel session on Gender and Education. The first talk
here was by Ingólfur Ásgeir Jóhannesson on "Does the National Curriculum
Guide 2011 pave way for gender and queer studies in Icelandic schools?" The
Icelandic National Curriculum has six fundamental pillars, one of them is
equality. This talked is based on text studies and interviews of teachers.
There is a focus on equal opportunities in the rest of the curriculum, but
rarely on gender studies. Sexual orientation is mentioned, queer and queer
studies are not mentioned. One of the books analysed was "I, You and We
All" (for 6th to 8th grade) in this, intersectionality is clearly used,
and there is a social understanding of gender.
Gender studies is an
elective course in some upper secondary schools in Iceland. This is a course
without a textbook or final exam. Queer studies is not a specific course
anywhere, but is a part of gender studies. The inclusion of gender studies as
an elective course is the result of a spontaneous movement among upper
secondary teachers, supported by student interest. In one school, Pink
Holocaust is taught.
The second part of
that parallel session was Anja Kraus' talk on "'Gender' as a Tacit
Dimension of Pedagogy". Her starting point was that the the aim of
pedagogy is to set people free, the idea of Bildung. Gender can be seen as an
analytical tool, helping to understand the constitution of practices and
knowledge domains. Traditional pedagogy tends to rely on logic and on concepts
that are supposed to exactly fit reality, she argued. Postmodern approaches
rely more on self-interpretations. "Bring the body into the
discussion" was one expression used. Queer theory, Butler's performativity
and body-phenomenological concepts were contrasted, and apparently the latter
was the preferred one.
As far as I
understand it, a text is seen as problematic because it imposes logic on the
world, which makes it a bit problematic to give a talk (a text) on a postmodern
approach (or on anything, really).
Thus ended the first
day of NERA 2015. A very varied day - a bit more varied than I prefer, I guess.
But I do bring some interesting points with me from this day.
Thursday, January 1, 2015
I'm not happy with the way I'm referred to...
Some time ago, Google Scholar noted that there was a reference to me in a new paper, The Need for the Inclusion of History of Mathematics into Secondary School Curriculum: Perceptions of Mathematics Teachers by Habila Elisha Zuya. It is published in the journal International Journal for Innovation Education and Research (IJIER), a journal that is peer-reviewed, but states that "The review process takes maximum two weeks." Hm...
The article refers to me in this way:
A number of researchers have pointed out that teachers' interest in mathematics increased when introduced to the history of mathematics (e.g. Smestad, 2009; Siu, 2004; Phillippou & Chritou, 1998; Stander, 1989). However, these researchers maintained that teachers found no interest in using the history of mathematics within the curriculum.I do not think my data can be used to claim that "teachers' interest in mathematics increased when introduced to the history of mathematics" or that I claim that in the article. Neither can my article be used to suggest that "teachers found no interest in using the history of mathematics within the curriculum". Of course, I may be wrong, maybe indeed my article does suggest something else than what I intended. But I am more tempted to believe that this is a case of trying to fit too many references into too short a paper, so that the actual point of view of each reference is not retained.
I just wanted to get it off my heart. I don't think the journal would be interested in publishing a note to this effect, at least not without me paying for the privilege...
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