Embodied instrumentation in learning mathematics as the genesis of a body-artifact functional system

Publication date

2021-07

Authors

Shvarts, AnnaISNI 0000000492921279
Alberto, RosaISNI 0000000492833973
Bakker, ArthurORCID 0000-0002-9604-3448ISNI 0000000392965936
Doorman, MichielORCID 0000-0002-3233-3673ISNI 0000000396216721
Drijvers, PaulISNI 0000000369715867

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Recent developments in cognitive and educational science highlight the role of the body in learning. Novel digital technologies increasingly facilitate bodily interaction. Aiming for understanding of the body’s role in learning mathematics with technology, we reconsider the instrumental approach from a radical embodied cognitive science perspective. We highlight the complexity of any action regulation, which is performed by a complex dynamic functional system of the body and brain in perception-action loops driven by multilevel intentionality. Unlike mental schemes, functional systems are decentralized and can be extended by artifacts. We introduce the notion of a body-artifact functional system, pointing to the fact that artifacts are included in the perception-action loops of instrumented actions. The theoretical statements of this radical embodied reconsideration of the instrumental approach are illustrated by an empirical example, in which embodied activities led a student to the development of instrumented actions with a unit circle as an instrument to construct a sine graph. Supplementing videography of the student’s embodied actions and gestures with eye-tracking data, we show how new functional systems can be formed. Educational means to facilitate the development of body-artifact functional systems are discussed.

Keywords

Educational technology, Embodied cognition, Eye-tracking, Functional system, Instrumental genesis, Mathematics education, General Mathematics, Education

Citation

Shvarts, A, Alberto, R, Bakker, A, Doorman, M & Drijvers, P 2021, 'Embodied instrumentation in learning mathematics as the genesis of a body-artifact functional system', Educational Studies in Mathematics, vol. 107, no. 3, pp. 447-469. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10649-021-10053-0