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Designing and Using Mathematical Tasks

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Mathematics seems, on the face of it, a cut and dried subject. But does being able to do mathematics Being competent at techniques Understanding how ideas and techniques fit together Using basic principles in problemsolving Something else or all of these? This book addresses these questions through a definition of learning as transformation in the way that learners perceive or think. Learners increase their choice of actions and develop their powers to think mathematically and their competence and fluency in using specific techniques and language and their appreciation of how ideas fit together.

156 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2006

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About the author

John Mason

13 books4 followers
Librarian Note: There is more than one author by this name in the Goodreads database.

John Mason, Professor, The Open University, is well known for many books including Thinking Mathematically with Leone Burton and Kaye Stacey and Learning and Doing Mathematics. More recently he has published Practitioner Research Using the Discipline of Noticing. He has a wealth of experience of helping practitioners to develop their own practice, and to turn that into research.

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