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Biographical
Information:
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Higinio
Dominguez: Degrees: Bachelor of Arts, Mathematics
Education, from University of Texas, Brownsville. Master's
in Bilingual-Bicultural Studies (Concentration: ESL),
from University of Texas, San Antonio. Currently writing
dissertation proposal for Doctoral Program in Multilingual
Education (Area of specialization: Bilingual Mathematics
Education), at the University of Texas, Austin. Research
interest: Investigate linguistic and extra-linguistic
resources employed by bilingual students to construct
meaning in mathematics. |
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Abstract:
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The view of mathematics education as an activity that
involves participants in social interaction challenges
what it means to know and learn mathematics, as it
reveals a connection between experience and language,
more specifically between words and actions. Brown
(2001) argues: "spoken words are always part of some
sort of action" (pp. 69-70) and raises questions such
as: "How do we share our thinking with other people?
How do language and symbols mediate this?" (p. 9).
Habermas and Gadamer ask whether it is possible to
frame all experience in language. My research analyzes
the non-verbal communication of second-grade bilingual
students. I argue that the richness of bilingual students'
mathematical understanding requires an investigation
of forms of meaning making that transcend language.
The flexible use of two languages in bilingual classrooms
suggests that bilingual learners may use alternative
forms of communication (e.g., nonverbal communication)
as equally flexibly as language. The various levels
of linguistic proficiency that characterize bilingual
classrooms constitute an opportunity for exploration
of non-verbal communication as a way to expand what
it means to communicate mathematically.
Literature Review
The literature, which explores the intersection of
language, experience, and meaning, highlights beliefs
such as: "knowledge that has been made explicit-that
is, languaged knowledge-is only a tiny fragment of
knowing" (Davis, 1977, p. 115); "it is not useful,
nor even possible, to represent all aspects of human
experience in natural language…[and]… there must be
representational systems not involving words which
humans use to encode information" (Huttenlocher, 1993,
1976, as cited by Alibali & Goldin-Meadow, p. 514);
"speech and gesture together can often provide a clearer
and more accurate picture of what children really
know about a given concept than either modality alone"
(Kelly et al., 2002, p. 21). This literature also
presents empirical evidence on how the correlation
between language and gestures is mediated by meaning
and on the role of gestures as supporting verbal comprehension.
Methodology
Seven second-grade bilingual students participated
in this study. Half of the participants were proficient
bilinguals, and half were less proficient bilinguals.
On three occasions, students were given two addition
and subtraction problems. To analyze the students'
nonverbal behavior, I used an interpretive research
approach. According to Lampert (1990), "The purpose
of interpretive research is not to determine whether
general propositions about learning or teaching are
true or false but to further our understanding of
the character of these particular kinds of human activity"
(pp. 36-37).
Results
Student understood problems and explained solutions
using both verbal and nonverbal communication. In
general, the bilingual students demonstrated that
language does not constitute an impediment for bringing
meaning to their mathematics learning; rather, gestures
supported their own meaning making and the communication
of this meaning to other people. Examination of nonverbal
behavior may reveal important information about the
students' conceptual understanding that is otherwise
not available in their verbal explanations. Attention
to diverse forms of communication is essential in
bilingual classrooms given that students in these
classrooms often come from environments in which extra-linguistic
factors may be prominent in cultural communication
patterns. Also, the emphasis in mathematics education
on understanding adds importance to the exploration
of all forms of meaning communication by bilingual
students. I hope this study will broaden our understanding
of bilingual education as multi-resourced education.
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