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Autor/inUeno, Kenji
TitelMathematics teaching before and after the Meiji Restoration.
QuelleIn: ZDM : mathematics education, 44 (2012) 4, S. 473-481
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Spracheenglisch
Dokumenttyponline; gedruckt; Zeitschriftenaufsatz
ISSN1863-9690; 1863-9704
DOI10.1007/s11858-012-0443-9
SchlagwörterMathematik; Mathematikunterricht; Mathematische Bildung; 17. Jahrhundert; 18. Jahrhundert; 19. Jahrhundert; Entwicklung; China; Japan
AbstractThis paper outlines mathematical education before the Meiji Restoration, and how it changed as a result. The Meiji Restoration in 1868 completely changed the social structure of Japan. In the Edo period (1600-1868) Japan was divided into domains (han) governed by local lords (daimyo). Tokugawa Shogunate supervised local lords and governed Japan indirectly. In the Edo period there were no wars for more than two centuries and many people participated in cultural activities. Japanese mathematics developed in its own way under the influence of old Chinese mathematics. Japan also had a good education system so that the literacy rate was quite high. Each domain had its own school for samurai but mainly education was provided privately. Private schools for elementary education were called terakoya, in which mainly reading and writing and often arithmetic by the soroban (Japanese abacus) were taught. In the Edo period the soroban (abacus) was the only tool for computation and Arabic numerals were not used. The Meiji government was eager to establish a modern centralized state in which education played a key role. In 1872 the Ministry of Education declared the education order, whereby in elementary schools only western mathematics should be taught and the soroban should not be used. But almost all teachers only knew Japanese traditional mathematics "wasan" so they insisted on using the soroban. This was the starting point of a long dispute on the soroban in elementary education in Japan. Two Japanese mathematicians, Kikuchi Dairoku and Fujisawa Rikitaro, played a central role in the modernization of mathematical education in Japan. Kikuchi studied mathematics in England and brought back English synthetic geometry to Japan. Fujisawa was a student of Kikuchi at the Imperial University and studied mathematics in Germany. He was the first Japanese mathematician to make a contribution to original research in the modern sense. He published a book on mathematical education in elementary school, which built the foundation of mathematical education in Japan.
Erfasst vonFIZ Karlsruhe - Leibniz-Institut für Informationsinfrastruktur
Update2013/1
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