Jonathan M. Borwein
Commemorative Conference
25—29 September, 2017
◄Education►
Theme chaired by Judy-anne Osborn and Naomi Borwein
Keynote talk:
Breaking the Symbol Barrier — a New Approach to Learning Mathematics
We have known since the publication of the book Street Mathematics and School Mathematics by Nunes et al in 1993 that children (and adults) learn and
perform mathematics far more effectively when they engage with it in a real-life context as opposed to the formal symbols of abstract mathematics. The problems so
many have with mathematics are rooted not in the mathematical thinking (at the conceptual level) but the "interface" issues of handling an abstract linguistic
structure. I have spent the last ten years developing and testing alternative representations of various mathematical concepts in an attempt to "break the symbol
barrier (to effective math learning)" that Street Mathematics highlighted. I will demonstrate three of those alternative representations (one already
available in app form, the other two in the final stages of development) and discuss some of the research that has been carried out on those three learning apps and
others designed in a similar way. I will also say something about the possibilities for transfer, both from one mathematical concept to another when carried out in a
"symbol free" way, and from "symbol free" learning to mastery of the same concept using traditional symbolic representations.
I'll finish by drawing a parallel between this work and the Experimental Mathematics for which Jon Borwein was a leading developer.
I'll finish by drawing a parallel between this work and the Experimental Mathematics for which Jon Borwein was a leading developer.
Deciphering the Schism in Math/Education
This talk analyses the ideological, cultural, and heuristic roots that often invisibly dictate disciplinary boundaries between math and education. Part of my
doctoral research involves the investigation of disciplinary rifts, or turf wars, in academia; after decades of observing the international mathematics community,
such an analytic lens will be applied to math education. Indeed, it is important to not just consider the microlevel of curriculum and pedagogy, but underlying trends
that foster and govern the latent schism between math educators and mathematicians. In this talk, I will use real life examples and anecdotes to explore how this
academic conflict follows standard patterns of interdisciplinary schisms. Recognising these patterns is integral to bridging the gulf.
Why Students Hate Statistics and Why it Matters to the Reproducibility of Medical Research

Crossing Boundaries:
Fostering Collaboration between Mathematics Educators
and Mathematicians in Initial Teacher Education Programs

Mathematics Education in the Computational Age: Challenges and Opportunities

Sometimes it is easier to see than to say

Education-led Workshop: Maths, Education, Research and Culture

About Jon: Learner and Teacher I first met Jon Borwein at an AustMS dinner, where we happened to be seated next to each other. Although we hadn't known each other before, we were soon in vigorous talk about Education, and what really matters in what we as Educators bring and do. Like every conversation with Jon, it was about ideas and people, with Jon making his points in assured rapid-fire, solidly backed-up if queried on any particular, interwoven with vignettes of stories drawn from all over the world. By good fortune I was at the launch of Jon's CARMA centre at the University of Newcastle, and later joined the group first as a postdoc and later as Faculty, and Education representative on the CARMA Executive. From that vantage, I've had the privilege of continuing that first conversation, for roughly seven years.
Conversations never end with Jon, a bit like his talks! His presentations were always grand panoplies of which he would draw upon samples according to mood and need, picking up threads again at a later time, re-envisaged for a new purpose, but with ever the same underlying themes of discovery, joy, surprise, and human narrative. The slides of his many talks are still available on the Founding Director's link on the CARMA website. Whenever Jon was speaking, he was teaching. Why? I think it was because he was himself an insatiable learner; and that learning about mathematics and people was a great joy in his life which he wanted to share, and still does through his prolific legacy.
Focus questions for the panel discussion:
Q1. Can research practices be fruitfully incorporated in school mathematics?
Q2. Can mathematics be taught in such a way that the general population do not fear it?
Q3. How can we change mathematics research training to be more inclusive of a diversity of people and cultures?
Q4. How do the specific characters and needs of the research areas effect the above questions?
Active Learning in Pure Mathematics

AMSI’s Advanced Collaborative Environment (ACE)
