Colloquia 2012-2013

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Mathematics Colloquium

All colloquia are on Fridays at 4:00 pm in Van Vleck B239, unless otherwise indicated.

Fall 2010

date speaker title host(s)
sept 3 Timo Seppalainen (Madison) Scaling exponents for a 1+1 dimensional directed polymer local
sept 10 Moe Hirsch (Madison) Actions of Lie groups and Lie algebras on manifolds local
sept 17 Uri Andrews (Madison) Computable stability theory local
sept 24 Margo Anderson (UW-Milwaukee) The politics of numbers Jordan (Math and... seminar)
oct 1 Matthew Finn (U. of Adelaide) Hot spots Jean-Luc
wed oct 6 Robert Krasny (U. of Michigan) Computing vortex sheet motion Shi
oct 8 Anita Wager (Madison) Bridging In and Out-of-School Mathematics: A Framework for Incorporating Students' Culture Steffen
oct 15 Felipe Voloch (U. Texas Austin) Local-Global principles for integral points on curves Nigel
oct 22 Markus Banagl (U. Heidelberg) TBA Maxim
nov 5 Tom Hales (Pittsburgh) TBA Nigel (Distinguished lecture)
nov 12 Greg Buck (St. Anselm) TBA Jean-Luc
nov 19 Jeff Xia (Northwestern) TBA Shi
wed dec 1 Peter Markowich (Cambridge and Vienna) TBA Shi (Wasow Lecture)
dec 10 Benson Farb (Chicago) TBA Jean-Luc

Abstracts

Anita Wager Bridging In and Out-of-School Mathematics: A Framework for Incorporating Students' Culture

This presentation will examine a professional development designed to explore a broadened notion of teaching for understanding that considers the cultural and socio-political contexts in which children live and learn. The goal of the study was to identify how teachers, in the process of learning to consider their mathematics pedagogy through an equity lens, construed the relationships among mathematics achievement and culture. An analysis of the features teachers focused on when they incorporated the ideas of mathematics teaching for understanding with students' out-of-school mathematical knowledge revealed four related practices: (a) identifying embedded mathematical practices prominent in contexts, (b) addressing cultural activities using school mathematics, (c) creating teacher initiated situated settings, and (d) using cultural contexts for problems. The practices provide a framework to address an ongoing issue in mathematics education: how to incorporate students out-of-school experiences in the classroom.