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Goulart, Maria Ines Mafra; Roth, Wolff-Michael – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2010
In this study we investigate how 5-year-old children in Brazil and their teachers collectively design science curriculum. More specifically, we develop an agency|structure dialectic as a framework to describe this collective praxis in which science curriculum may emerge as the result of children-teacher transactions rather than as a result of…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Young Children, Foreign Countries, Science Curriculum
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Roth, Wolff-Michael – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2017
Constructivist learning theories have become the dominant ideology in educational circles, in part, because there is a primacy on the agential individual with its definite identity. However, precisely because "to construct" is a "transitive" verb, it occludes the fact that in learning and development, we come to know something…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Learning Theories, Teaching Methods, Mathematics
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Roth, Wolff-Michael – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2016
Recent theoretical advances on learning (mathematics) emphasize the fact that what results from engagement with curriculum materials is not entirely in the control of the students in the way classical theories of knowing and learning suggest. These new theories distinguish themselves by either invoking distributed agency, some of which is…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Theories, Mathematics Curriculum, Females
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Roth, Wolff-Michael – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2021
The core epistemologies underlying science education have changed little over the past 40 years: whereas science educators tend to take constructivist stances, many or most teachers tend to be concerned with the appropriation and transfer of facts and theories mandated as outcomes in the curriculum guidelines of the relevant authorities (e.g.,…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Epistemology, Science Education, Educational Philosophy
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Radford, Luis; Roth, Wolff-Michael – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2017
In a recent article published in this journal, Williams ("Educational Studies in Mathematics, 92," 59-72, 2016) offers a critique of neo-Vygotskian perspectives exemplified in recent work on the "funds of knowledge" and on "cultural-historical activity theoretic" perspectives. The critique has great value in that it…
Descriptors: Mathematics, Mathematics Education, Alienation, Cultural Context
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Roth, Wolff-Michael – International Journal of Educational Research, 2007
Cultural-Historical Activity Theory (CHAT), which had been termed the best-held secret of education about 15 years ago, has had an exponential growth over the past three decades. Because it thematizes largely the structural aspects of activity systems, the theory only recently has been developed to include emotional, motivational, and…
Descriptors: Middle Schools, Self Concept, Rural Schools, Moral Values
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Roth, Wolff-Michael; Maheux, Jean-François – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2015
Mathematics educators have shown increasing interest in theorizing knowing and learning as something alive or as something that comes alive through the involvement of the body. Almost all current efforts attempt doing so by focusing on the body in which the otherwise invisible living being exhibits itself, thereby failing to consider everything…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Learning Theories, Mathematical Concepts, Mathematics Activities