A Mathematician's Lament: How School Cheats Us Out of Our Most Fascinating and Imaginative Art Form
By (Author) Paul Lockhart
Foreword by Keith Devlin
Bellevue Literary Press
Bellevue Literary Press
9th June 2009
United States
General
Non Fiction
Educational strategies and policy
510.71
Paperback
144
Width 127mm, Height 190mm, Spine 12mm
155g
One of the best critiques of current mathematics education I have ever seen.Keith Devlin, math columnist on NPRs Morning Edition
A brilliant research mathematician who has devoted his career to teaching kids reveals math to be creative and beautiful and rejects standard anxiety-producing teaching methods. Witty and accessible, Paul Lockharts controversial approach will provoke spirited debate among educators and parents alike and it will alter the way we think about math forever.
Paul Lockhart, has taught mathematics at Brown University and UC Santa Cruz. Since 2000, he has dedicated himself to K-12 level students at St. Anns School in Brooklyn, New York.
One of the best critiques of current K-12 mathematics education I have ever seen, written by a first-class research mathematician who elected to devote his teaching career to K-12 education. Keith Devlin, NPRs Math Guy
Gorgeous. . . . Lockhart is passionate, contagiously so. Los Angeles Times
Searing and pointed. . . . An easy, thoughtful, and entertaining read. . . . [Lockharts] passion makes the critique compelling. Notices of the American Mathematical Society
Provides a fresh way of thinking about math, and education in general, that should inspire practical applications in the classroom and at home. Publishers Weekly
A Mathematicians Lament is a fascinating argument that anyone interested in mathematics education should read. I promise that they will enjoy the experience, whether they agree with all that Lockhart writes or not. Bryan Bunch, author of The Kingdom of Infinite Number: A Field Guide
This brief and elegant celebration of mathematics is a charming rant against the way you and I learned the subject. Is painting just coloring in numbered regions Is the sunset just a list of wavelengths and a compass setting No more, Lockhart argues, than mathematics is just definitions and formulas. To put back play and joy in our mathematics classrooms, he shows, all we need do is restore the real mathematics. Robert P. Crease, author of The Great Equations: Breakthroughs in Science from Pythagoras to Heisenberg
Lockhart has written an important, and eloquent, lamentation and exultation: he laments about the state of math education today, but exults in the hope that teachers might be inspired to invite students to experience mathematics as the exciting poetry of ideas that it truly is. Barry Mazur, Gerhard Gade University Professor, Harvard University and author of Imagining Numbers (particularly the square root of minus fifteen)
Paul Lockhart became interested in mathematics when he was 14 (outside the classroom, he points out). He dropped out of college after one semester to devote himself exclusively to math. Based on his own research he was admitted to Columbia, received a PhD, and has taught at major universities. Since 2000 he has dedicated himself to "subversively" teaching grade-school math.