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Common Threads: Women, Mathematics and Work
 
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Common Threads: Women, Mathematics and Work [Paperback]

Mary Harris (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

June 1997
Mathematics is still the quintessential male subject. Throughout the world it is women who underachieve in it. And needlework still defines femininity: it is mostly women who do needlework. Yet it is often a highly mathematical activity - activity that goes unaccredited because women do it.

Common Threads traces how, when national education systems were initially set up, school mathematics and needlework came to mark systematic differences between boys' and girls' education, and reveals the lasting influence in differentiated expectations for boys and girls all over the world.

The book explores the mathematical content of a variety of textile activities worldwide and shows how these can be used in the teaching mathematics where expectations are low or where curricula are gendered or culturally irrelevant. It suggests how women, in particular, could gain greater economic independence if the mathematics skills they acquire while learning textile crafts were formally accredited.

This book has implications for all involved in mathematics education, the education of girls and women, ethno-mathematics and development education. Its content impacts upon research and education policy and on adult education worldwide.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 186 pages
  • Publisher: Trentham Books (June 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1858560152
  • ISBN-13: 978-1858560151
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.6 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,723,069 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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5.0 out of 5 stars A Tapestry of Mathematical Intelligence, October 5, 2006
By 
Myrna Estep (San Antonio, Texas USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Common Threads: Women, Mathematics and Work (Paperback)
I like Mary Harris' book. It is both a history and dialogue with the reader about the social control and gendering of mathematics and education, focusing upon the abusive subordination of women and girls. The title Common Threads is from an interactive exhibit she designed, produced, and presented in many countries, bringing together a variety of hands-on sewing and needlecraft to challenge centuries of gender stereotypes about mathematics: that it is masculine and, because it requires high levels of intellect, is obviously no place for girls.

A basic theme of Common Threads is that while over the centuries girls were relegated to such presumed "mindless" activities held not to require much intellect, those very activities are in fact very mindful and embedded with very high level mathematical concepts and operations. Just as the famous "Penrose Tiles" and "Four Color Problem" entail the application of very high level abstract concepts, operations, and theorems to material objects and patterns, one finds the same fruitful abstract mathematical applications in patterns and designs of sewing.

But because women and girls are generally the ones who sew--a fact that is itself a result of centuries of sex role stereotyping by male religious and educational powers--the mathematical intelligence found implicitly in those activities is usually either not recognized or is denied outright.

The mathematical knowledge found there is denied by those mathematicians of a theoretical bent. These are usually white upper class males educated in institutional mathematics, who insist that abstract theorems must be known explicitly in theory prior to any application to material objects or designs, or one does not know them at all. Without that theoretical knowledge, sewing certain complex patterns is simply sewing. It is not mathematics.

Their objections highlight an issue between "theory and practice" found in the distinction Harris notes between institutional mathematics, a body of infallible knowledge waiting to be memorized or otherwise instilled into passive students--and ethnomathematics, found in the cultural "living interests" of a people. Because mathematics is used and abused as the language of power, the means by which political, commercial, industrial, scientific and technological progress are measured, it has largely been used as the language of control.

Thus, the most widespread use of mathematics, according to Harris, has been its use to fail people, particularly women. As she notes from another author, mathematics as a body of infallible knowledge can bear no social responsibility. But conceived as a way of coming to know, a living and developing knowing, it has a place in the daily lives of everyone.

Harris' book is timely, especially in the face of growing reactionary efforts in education, particularly in higher education, to keep women students out of academic areas such as math, science and engineering, based upon the same biological and social determinist theses used centuries ago. I highly and warmly recommend it.

Myrna L. Estep, Ph.D.
[This review was originally published in Initiatives, Journal of the National Association for Women in Education, Volume 58, number 4, Spring, 1998; also in New York State Mathematics Teachers' Journal, 1998.]



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