Kate le Roux
University of Cape Town
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kate le Roux.
European Journal of Engineering Education | 2009
Saalih Allie; Mogamat Noor Armien; Nicolette Burgoyne; Jennifer M. Case; Brandon I. Collier-Reed; Tracy S. Craig; Andrew Deacon; Duncan Fraser; Zulpha Geyer; Cecilia Jacobs; Jeff Jawitz; Bruce Kloot; Linda Kotta; G.S. Langdon; Kate le Roux; Delia Marshall; Disaapele Mogashana; Corrinne Shaw; Gillian Sheridan; Nicolette Wolmarans
In this paper, we propose that learning in engineering involves taking on the discourse of an engineering community, which is intimately bound up with the identity of being a member of that community. This leads to the notion of discursive identity, which emphasises that students’ identities are constituted through engaging in discourse. This view of learning implies that success in engineering studies needs to be defined with particular reference to the sorts of identities that students develop and how these relate to identities in the world of work. In order to achieve successful learning in engineering, we need to recognise the multiple identities held by our students, provide an authentic range of engineering-related activities through which students can develop engineering identities and make more explicit key aspects of the discourse of engineering of which lecturers are tacitly aware. We include three vignettes to illustrate how some of the authors of this paper (from across three different institutions) have applied this perspective of learning in their teaching practice.
Language and Education | 2008
Kate le Roux
The concepts of ‘access’ and ‘relevance’ feature prominently in the discourse of change in mathematics education in South Africa. One way in which these concepts have been played out in mathematics classrooms is in the use of mathematical problems with real-world contexts. This paper presents a Critical Discourse Analysis of one such problem, selected from a first-year university access course in mathematics at a higher education institution in South Africa. Faircloughs three-dimensional model for the Critical Discourse Analysis is used to identify traces of different texts within this problem. The author argues that, in spite of evidence of texts that point to recent reforms in mathematics education and some possible signs of change, the mathematics text and the text of the school mathematical word problem remain dominant, and position the student in a particular way. The results of this analysis challenge some of the prevalent assumptions about ‘access’ and ‘relevance’ in mathematics education. The pap...The concepts of ‘access’ and ‘relevance’ feature prominently in the discourse of change in mathematics education in South Africa. One way in which these concepts have been played out in mathematics classrooms is in the use of mathematical problems with real-world contexts. This paper presents a Critical Discourse Analysis of one such problem, selected from a first-year university access course in mathematics at a higher education institution in South Africa. Faircloughs three-dimensional model for the Critical Discourse Analysis is used to identify traces of different texts within this problem. The author argues that, in spite of evidence of texts that point to recent reforms in mathematics education and some possible signs of change, the mathematics text and the text of the school mathematical word problem remain dominant, and position the student in a particular way. The results of this analysis challenge some of the prevalent assumptions about ‘access’ and ‘relevance’ in mathematics education. The paper also highlights the potential for using Critical Discourse Analysis in mathematics education research.
African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education | 2009
Kate le Roux
AbstractIn this paper I present a perspective of mathematics education and learning, termed a ‘sociopolitical perspective’. Classroom mathematical activity, in which certain ways of acting, behaving and knowing are given value, is located in a wider network of socio-political practices. Learning in mathematics is regarded as coming to participate in the discourse of the community that practises the mathematics. I argue that the use of a socio-political perspective allows the researcher and teacher to view classroom mathematical activity as a product of the network of socio-political practices in which it is located, rather than as a product of individual cognitive ability. I illustrate the use of this perspective by drawing on a study of learning in a first-year university access course in Mathematics at a South African university. Faircloughs method for critical discourse analysis, supplemented with work by Sfard and Morgan in mathematics education, was used to analyse both the text of a ‘real world’ pr...
Teaching in Higher Education | 2018
Kate le Roux
ABSTRACTAs public universities seek to be locally responsive and compete internationally, tensions arise between expansion and equity, and between discourses of neoliberalism and social justice. This article focuses on how students navigate these tensions, and the implications for how they can act, interact and be. Norman Fairclough’s three-level view of the social and language, and his method of critical discourse analysis are used to analyse longitudinal interviews with an undergraduate science student. This student is, on account of his home and schooling, considered ‘historically marginalised’ at an historically-white, English-medium South African university. The results show how the student navigates multiple positionings that draw on notions of class, language, independence, progress, choice, care, and so on. It is argued that while universities should support students to navigate some of these tensions, there is a need to re-imagine structuring discourses related to the ‘normal’, ‘independent’ univ...ABSTRACT As public universities seek to be locally responsive and compete internationally, tensions arise between expansion and equity, and between discourses of neoliberalism and social justice. This article focuses on how students navigate these tensions, and the implications for how they can act, interact and be. Norman Fairclough’s three-level view of the social and language, and his method of critical discourse analysis are used to analyse longitudinal interviews with an undergraduate science student. This student is, on account of his home and schooling, considered ‘historically marginalised’ at an historically-white, English-medium South African university. The results show how the student navigates multiple positionings that draw on notions of class, language, independence, progress, choice, care, and so on. It is argued that while universities should support students to navigate some of these tensions, there is a need to re-imagine structuring discourses related to the ‘normal’, ‘independent’ university student.
Archive | 2016
Kate le Roux; Willy Mwakapenda; Craig Pournara; Nancy Chitera; Vasen Pillay; Bruce Tobias
In 2003, Jill Adler and Stephen Lerman published a chapter entitled “Getting the description right and making it count: Ethical practice in mathematics education research”. They use the context of mathematics education in southern Africa to illuminate and open up a conversation about the ethical, methodological and political challenges faced by researchers in this and other similar contexts. These challenges relate to defining what counts as a problem in mathematics education, making the research “count” both locally for the participants and more broadly for the mathematics education community, and producing descriptions that are “right” in the sense that they are rigorous, valid, comprehensive and respectful. In this chapter we review how Jill has responded to these challenges in her own research over the past 20 years. We ask: How does respect for practice, democracy, truth and persons play out in her research descriptions? Are they right? For whom and how do they come to count? We also draw on our own research histories of working with Jill to reflect on how her research practice has impacted the postgraduate supervision space.
Higher Education | 2016
Margaret A.L. Blackie; Kate le Roux; Sioux McKenna
Educational Studies in Mathematics | 2016
Kate le Roux; Jill Adler
Perspectives in Education | 2014
Rochelle Kapp; Elmi Badenhorst; Bongi Bangeni; Tracy S. Craig; Vicki Janse van Rensburg; Kate le Roux; Robert Prince; June Pym; Ermien van Pletzen
Systemic Practice and Action Research | 2017
Corrinne Shaw; Kate le Roux
Journal of Urban Mathematics Education | 2017
Annica Andersson; Kate le Roux