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Royaumont's Aftermath in Iceland - Motion Geometry, Transformations and Groups

Royaumont's Aftermath in Iceland - Motion Geometry, Transformations and Groups


Title: Royaumont's Aftermath in Iceland - Motion Geometry, Transformations and Groups
Alternative Title: Eftirköst Royaumont-ráðstefnunnar á Íslandi - Hreyfirúmfræði, ummyndanir og grúpur
Author: Bjarnadóttir, Kristín
Barbin, Évelyne
Bjarnadóttir, Kristín
Furinghetti, Fulvia
Karp, Alexander
Moussard, Guillaume
Prytz, Johan
Schubring, Gert
Date: 2020
Language: English
Scope: 14
School: Education
ISBN: 978-3-95987-167-9
Series: "Dig where you stand" 6; ()
"Dig Where You Stand"; 6()
Subject: motion geometry, transformation, group theory, School Mathematics Project; Mathematics (all)
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/4872

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Citation:

 
Bjarnadóttir , K 2020 , Royaumont's Aftermath in Iceland - Motion Geometry, Transformations and Groups . in É Barbin , K Bjarnadóttir , F Furinghetti , A Karp , G Moussard , J Prytz & G Schubring (eds) , "Dig where you stand" 6 : Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on the History of Mathematics Education . "Dig Where You Stand" , vol. 6 , WTM Verlag für wissenschaftliche Texte und Medien , Münster , pp. 73-86 , The Sixth International Conference on the History of Mathematics Education , Marseille , France , 16/09/19 .
 
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Abstract:

 
In the Meran Program in 1905 and at the Royaumont Seminar in 1959, among the main themes were transformation geometry, including motion geometry, and group theory. Those themes entered some Danish mathematics textbooks and the English School Mathematics Project's textbook series, both used in Iceland around 1970. One of the arguments for including group theory in school mathematics was that its structure corresponded to structures in the minds of children. Eventually, the emphasis on motion in geometry subordinated the structure of the transformation groups. These ideas proved short-lived in Iceland, they coincided with a great expansion of the school system, students were unaccustomed to studying textbooks in English, available teachers were not receptive, and mathematical analysis was considered neglected. In later applications, geometric transformations have become the basis of a large industry: animations in motion pictures and games.
 
In the Meran Program in 1905 and at the Royaumont Seminar in 1959, among the main themes were transformation geometry, including motion geometry, and group theory. Those themes entered some Danish mathematics textbooks and the English School Mathematics Project’s textbook series, both used in Iceland around 1970. One of the arguments for including group theory in school mathematics was that its structure corresponded to structures in the minds of children. Eventually, the emphasis on motion in geometry subordinated the structure of the transformation groups. These ideas proved short-lived in Iceland, they coincided with a great expansion of the school system, students were unaccustomed to studying textbooks in English, available teachers were not receptive, and mathematical analysis was considered neglected. In later applications, geometric transformations have become the basis of a large industry: animations in motion pictures and games.
 

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