Abstract
It is our contention that research plays a role in creating and reifying the very concepts and notions that it seeks to study. Published research in multilingual mathematics education was reviewed to critically examine its underpinning rationality on: (a) how the learner is portrayed; (b) how mathematics education (teaching and learning) is portrayed; and (c) the notion of language as formulated in the texts. Two research trends were examined: large-scale studies on mathematics achievement and how they address multilingualism, and small-scale, classroom-based studies and their recommendations about practice. On the basis of this critical review we argue that research very often has a double effect of power. On the one hand it reifies categories of exclusion such as “multilingual learner” by documenting its existence. On the other hand, it provides methods and instruments to diminish the achievement gap and help the multilingual learner assimilate with the culture and language of the dominant group. We conclude that research rationality cannot be seen without a deeper questioning of the philosophical, ontological, and epistemological assumptions that underpin the traditional views of what constitutes mathematics and, by implication, mathematics education.
Notes
- 1.
Education for All (EFA) is an international commitment first launched in Jomtien, Thailand in 1990 to bring the benefits of education to “every citizen in every society.” EFA has six major goals (for details see http://www.unesco.org/education/efa/ed_for_all/).
- 2.
The Southern and Eastern Africa Consortium for Monitoring Educational Quality (SACMEQ) is an international nonprofit developmental organization of 15 Ministries of Education in Southern and Eastern Africa. A key purpose is to apply scientific methods to monitor and evaluate the conditions of schooling and the quality of education, with technical assistance from UNESCO International Institute for Educational Planning (http://www.sacmeq.org/about.htm).
- 3.
The Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) is an international assessment of the mathematics and science knowledge of fourth-grade and eighth-grade students around the world. TIMSS was developed by the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement to allow participating nations to compare students’ educational achievement across borders (http://timss.bc.edu/)
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Halai, A., Muzaffar, I., Valero, P. (2016). Research Rationalities and the Construction of the Deficient Multilingual Mathematics Learner. In: Barwell, R., et al. Mathematics Education and Language Diversity. New ICMI Study Series. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-14511-2_15
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