TY - JOUR
T1 - How does language impact the learning of mathematics? Comparison of English and Korean speaking university students' discourses on infinity
AU - Kim, Dong Joong
AU - Ferrini-Mundy, Joan
AU - Sfard, Anna
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - This study investigates the impact of language on students' learning of mathematics. A comparison has been made between English and Korean speaking university students' discourses on infinity. In Korean, unlike in English, there is a disconnection between colloquial and mathematical discourses on infinity, in that the mathematical word for infinity is not a formalized version of a colloquial word but a novel sound, inspired by a Chinese term for infinity. This difference was expected to be paralleled by certain dissimilarity between the ways the discourses of the two groups developed toward the mathematical discourse on infinity. Data with the help of which we intended to test this hypothesis were collected through surveys and interviews. A total of 132 English speakers and 126 Korean speakers participated in the survey and then twenty paired representatives were selected from each group for follow-up interviews. It was found that in spite of the comparable levels of mathematical performance, there was, indeed, a visible dissimilarity between mathematical discourses on infinity of Korean- and English-speaking students. In general, whereas no group could pride itself on a well-developed mathematical discourse on infinity, the mathematical discourse of the English speakers, just like their colloquial discourse, was predominantly processual, whereas the Korean-speaking students' talk on infinity was more structural and, in an admittedly superficial way, closer to the formal mathematical discourse.
AB - This study investigates the impact of language on students' learning of mathematics. A comparison has been made between English and Korean speaking university students' discourses on infinity. In Korean, unlike in English, there is a disconnection between colloquial and mathematical discourses on infinity, in that the mathematical word for infinity is not a formalized version of a colloquial word but a novel sound, inspired by a Chinese term for infinity. This difference was expected to be paralleled by certain dissimilarity between the ways the discourses of the two groups developed toward the mathematical discourse on infinity. Data with the help of which we intended to test this hypothesis were collected through surveys and interviews. A total of 132 English speakers and 126 Korean speakers participated in the survey and then twenty paired representatives were selected from each group for follow-up interviews. It was found that in spite of the comparable levels of mathematical performance, there was, indeed, a visible dissimilarity between mathematical discourses on infinity of Korean- and English-speaking students. In general, whereas no group could pride itself on a well-developed mathematical discourse on infinity, the mathematical discourse of the English speakers, just like their colloquial discourse, was predominantly processual, whereas the Korean-speaking students' talk on infinity was more structural and, in an admittedly superficial way, closer to the formal mathematical discourse.
KW - Communicational approach
KW - Discourse
KW - English
KW - Infinity
KW - Korean
KW - Language
KW - Mathematics learning
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84862777325&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijer.2012.01.004
DO - 10.1016/j.ijer.2012.01.004
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84862777325
SN - 0883-0355
VL - 51-52
SP - 86
EP - 108
JO - International Journal of Educational Research
JF - International Journal of Educational Research
ER -