The Faculty of Education congratulates Prof. Anna Sfard, the De
pt. of mathematics education, on her recent selection to the 2015 AERA (American Educational Research Association) fellows program. The fellows' selection will be celebrated in a special event at the coming AERA annual meeting in Chicago.
The purpose of the American Educational Research Association (AERA) Fellows Program is to honor education researchers with substantial research accomplishments, to convey the Association’s commitment to excellence in research, and to enable the next generation of emerging scholars to appreciate the value of sustained achievements in research and the breadth of scholarship worthy of recognition.
Prof. Anna Sfard conducts research and teach in the domain of learning sciences, with particular focus on the relation between thinking and communication. Through the study of mathematical thinking and its growth, she aims to contribute to our understanding of human development, on the one hand, and to the practice of learning and teaching mathematics, on the other.
Her work is guided by the assumption that thinking is a form of communication. Inspired mainly by the work of Wittgenstein and Vygotsky, this non-dualist tenet implies that discursivity – the fact that all our activities are either purely communicational or imbued with and shaped by discourse – is the hallmark of our humanity. Our inclusions in certain discourse communities and exclusions from some others are what situates us socially and culturally and defines us as human beings. Our discourses are also repositories of complexity that underlie our ability to build on achievements of previous generations rather than beginning every time anew.
Based on these understandings, mathematics becomes a discourse – a well defined, unique form of communication. Here, the gradual accumulation of complexity can be seen with particular clarity.
In her empirical work, Prof. Sfard uses specially designed forms of discourse analysis to observe the processes of discursive growth both in individual learning and along history. Another question that guides her research is that of how the learning of mathematics is influenced by other discourses, e.g. those of cultural values and identity; and vice versa, how mathematics infiltrates other discourses and, in result, tacitly influences also those aspects of our lives that seem to have little to do with anything mathematical.
