A new issue of ZDM was published on Friday. It is a double issue, with the following theme: Interdisciplinarity in Mathematics Education: Psychology, Philosophy, Aesthetics, Modelling and Curriculum. Guest editor of this issue is Bharath Sriraman, the editor of The Montana Mathematics Enthusiast. The issue contains not less than 22 articles:
- Interdisciplinarity in mathematics education: psychology, philosophy, aesthetics, modelling and curriculum, by Bharath Sriraman
- Creativity and interdisciplinarity: one creativity or many creativities? by Jonathan Plucker and Dasha Zabelina
- The characteristics of mathematical creativity, by Bharath Sriraman
- Mathematical paradoxes as pathways into beliefs and polymathy: an experimental inquiry, by Bharath Sriraman
- Do we all have multicreative potential? by Ronald A. Beghetto and James C. Kaufman
- Aesthetics as a liberating force in mathematics education? by Nathalie Sinclair
- Mathematics learning and aesthetic production, by Herbert Gerstberger
- A historic overview of the interplay of theology and philosophy in the arts, mathematics and sciences, by Bharath Sriraman
- Integrating history and philosophy in mathematics education at university level through problem-oriented project work, by Tinne Hoff Kjeldsen and Morten Blomhøj
- Estimating Iraqi deaths: a case study with implications for mathematics education, by Brian Greer
- The decorative impulse: ethnomathematics and Tlingit basketry, by Swapna Mukhopadhyay
- Mathematics education research embracing arts and sciences, by Norma Presmeg
- Dialogue on mathematics education: two points of view on the state of the art, by Theodore Eisenberg and Michael N. Fried
- The harmony of opposites: a response to a response, by Norma Presmeg
- Method, certainty and trust across disciplinary boundaries, by David Pimm
- Promoting interdisciplinarity through mathematical modelling, by Lyn D. English
- Project organised science studies at university level: exemplarity and interdisciplinarity, by Morten Blomhøj and Tinne Hoff Kjeldsen
- Emergent modeling: discrete graphs to support the understanding of change and velocity, by L. M. Doorman and K. P. E. Gravemeijer
- New roles for mathematics in multi-disciplinary, upper secondary school projects, by Mette Andresen and Lena Lindenskov
- Supporting mathematical literacy: examples from a cross-curricular project, by Thilo Höfer and Astrid Beckmann
- Does interdisciplinary instruction raise students’ interest in mathematics and the subjects of the natural sciences? by Claus Michelsen and Bharath Sriraman
- Building a virtual learning community of problem solvers: example of CASMI community, by Viktor Freiman and Nicole Lirette-Pitre
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