2007
DOI: 10.1007/s10649-006-9058-9
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Situating graphs as workplace knowledge

Abstract: We investigate the use and knowledge of graphs in the context of a large industrial factory. We are particularly interested in the question of "transparency", a question that has been extensively considered in the general literature on tool use and, more recently, by Michael Roth and his colleagues in the context of scientific work. Roth uses the notion of transparency to characterise instances of graph use by highly educated scientists in cases where the context was familiar: the scientists were able to read … Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…These three connected dimensions capture what Noss, Hoyles, and colleagues (e.g. Hoyles et al, 2002;Noss, Bakker, Hoyles & Kent, 2007;Noss & Hoyles, 2011) describe as techno-mathematics or techno-mathematical literacies.…”
Section: Workplace Mathematics and Technologymentioning
confidence: 94%
“…These three connected dimensions capture what Noss, Hoyles, and colleagues (e.g. Hoyles et al, 2002;Noss, Bakker, Hoyles & Kent, 2007;Noss & Hoyles, 2011) describe as techno-mathematics or techno-mathematical literacies.…”
Section: Workplace Mathematics and Technologymentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Contradictions between different interpretations may exist in work situations when specific mathematical competencies are black-boxed such that operators in the laboratory can perform actions based on and with respect to graphs without being able "to explain the layers of crystallized mathematics to an outsider" (Williams & Wake, 2007, p. 334). In fact, graphs may not be helpful at all in locating where in a production process there might be trouble (Noss, Bakker, Hoyles, & Kent, 2007). In that study, one process engineer suggests that "you have to specifically go and look for [variations], it is not normally displayed.…”
Section: Contradictions and Everyday Mathematical Knowingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One can think, for example, of the increasing necessity of using information technology to process quantitative or symbolic data and of the consequences that this can have on mathematics curricula, with the introduction of topics like statistics and probability, and also, of basic elements of computer science. As observed by Noss et al (2007), a new ''techno-mathematical literacy'' is needed to cope with the dramatic increase in the deployment of information technologies within workplace practices.…”
Section: Setting the Scene: Mathematics Digital Technologies And Edumentioning
confidence: 99%