Friday 21 June 2013

Mathematics Curriculum



Teaching and learning of mathematics had been a subject of prime importance from earliest civilization to the modern times and it is a world-wide phenomenon as far back as 1890. According to Fakuade (1977) there had been great deal of concern regarding the way mathematics was taught to children throughout the civilized world. In England, Dr. J.J. Sylvester, one of the greatest mathematicians of his time, was very bitter about the way Euclidean Geometry was taught and would want to see geometry scrapped from mathematics curriculum so also was Mr. John Perry’s concern over the way applied mathematics was taught in close relationship to physics and recommended that more concrete examples should be used in teaching mathematics so that children can discover many facts through experimentation rather than through deduction and that more emphasis should be given to graphic methods.
        Similarly, in United States, France and Germany, Messrs F.H. Moore, J. Tannery and Felix Klein expressed the same point of view. In 1908, at the fourth International Congress of Mathematicians that sat in Rome, an International Commission on the teaching of Mathematics was appointed. This commission in particular, recommended better preparation of mathematics teachers, what mathematicians should be taught and in what way it should be taught. From 1955 upwards, the reform in science curriculum had spread to mathematics consequently, there was the School Mathematics Study Group (S.M.S.G.) base in Yale University, United States of America and other projects while in United Kingdom, the two best known were the School Mathematics Project (S.M.P.) and the Midland Mathematics Experiment (M.M.E.). By 1960, there was the development of modern mathematics – an attempt to modernize the context and teaching of mathematics.
        The subject mathematics is as old as man, it has argued that mankind, and even in most primitive times has some Intelligent Quotient (IQ) to the extent of recognizing when some objects are added or subtracted from small group. Before the introduction of western education in Nigeria, different tribes and ethnic groups had their unique system of counting and different ways of applying mathematical concepts. The child is taught counting by the use of songs folklores, games rhymes and the use of concrete objects, arm, finger, stones, stick, foot, pots, cups, basins etc. were used for measurement so that quantities were effectively compared without raucous (Obodo, 1997). Houses were constructed in various shapes, circulars, rectangular, square, triangular etc. bearing in mind the properties of these geometrical shapes.
        The teaching of mathematics in public schools, started about the middle of the 19th century (Badmus, 1997). Except in the first few years of introduction, students’ performance in mathematics has not been encouraging. In order to improve students’ performance in mathematics there has been innovations in mathematics curriculum, production of mathematics textbooks and other mathematical instructions materials. The Mathematical Association of Nigeria (MAN) has worked relentlessly to combat poor achievement in mathematics. Some of the contributions of MAN can be seen in the production of mathematical instructional materials, giving scholarship and award to students who have distinguished themselves in mathematics, organizing conferences and workshops for mathematics teachers in practice. The theme for the 1989 Annual National Conference of MAN was “War against Poor Achievement in Mathematics”.

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