Mathematical Association
Abbreviation | MA |
---|---|
Formation | 1871 |
Legal status | Non-profit organisation and registered charity |
Purpose | Professional organisation for mathematics educators |
Location |
|
Region served | UK |
Main organ | MA Council President – Peter M Neumann (2015-2016) |
Website | http://www.m-a.org.uk |
The Mathematical Association is a professional society concerned with mathematics education in the UK. The Mathematical Association has a long history of promoting the very best in learning and teaching Mathematics, they actively engage in consultation and discussions on issues currently affecting Mathematics education. The Mathematical Association respond professionally and constructively to ministerial announcements and to proposals from the Department for Education, and from bodies concerned with curricula, assessment and training. The association comments on inquiry reports, academic research findings and reports published by organisations and learned bodies supporting Mathematics in Britain. Occasionally, The Mathematical Association adopts position papers prompted by discussions amongst ordinary members, and at their committees. The Association hopes to have something distinctive to say on Mathematics curriculum and pedagogy, formative and summative assessment, inspection, the dissemination of quality assurance information, and the training, expertise, professional development, recruitment and retention of Mathematics teachers.
History
It was founded in 1871 as the Association for the Improvement of Geometrical Teaching and renamed to the Mathematical Association in 1894.[1][2] It was the first teachers' subject organisation formed in England. In March 1927, it held a three-day meeting in Grantham to commemorate the bicentenary of the death of Sir Isaac Newton, attended by Sir J. J. Thomson (discoverer of the electron), Sir Frank Watson Dyson – the Astronomer Royal, Sir Horace Lamb, and G. H. Hardy.
In the 1960s, when comprehensive education was being introduced, the Association was in favour of the 11 plus system. For maths teachers training at university, a teaching award that was examined was the Diploma of the Mathematical Association, later known as the Diploma in Mathematical Education of the Mathematical Association.
Function
It exists to "bring about improvements in the teaching of mathematics and its applications, and to provide a means of communication among students and teachers of mathematics".[3] Since 1894 it has published The Mathematical Gazette. It jointly hosts the British Congress of Mathematics Education conference which is held every 4 years in April, situated at different universities each year. This combined conference is supported by the following associations and societies:
- Junior Mathematical Challenge
- Association of Teachers of Mathematics
- The Mathematical Association
- National STEM Centre
- MEI - Innovators in Mathematics Education
- The Operational Research Society
- Royal Statistical Society
- Edinburgh Mathematical Society
- The Higher Education Academy
- British Society for Research into Learning Mathematics
- Heads of Department of Mathematical Sciences
- Royal Academy of Engineering
- National Centre for Excellence in the Teaching of Mathematics
- The London Mathematical Society
- British Society for the History of Mathematics
- The Association of Mathematics Education Teachers
- National Association of Mathematics Advisers
- Institute of Mathematics & its Applications
Structure
It is based in the south-east of Leicester on London Road (A6), just south of the Charles Frears campus of De Montfort University.
Aside from the Council, it has seven other specialist committees.
Regions
Its branches are sometimes shared with the ATM:
- Birmingham
- Cambridge
- East Midlands
- Glasgow
- Gloucester
- Liverpool
- London
- Marches
- Meridian (southern England)
- Sheffield
- Sussex
- Yorkshire
Past presidents
Past presidents of The Association for the Improvement of Geometrical Teaching included:
- 1871 T A Hirst PhD, FRS
- 1878 R B Hayward MA, FRS
- 1889 Professor G M Minchin MA, FRS
- 1891 Professor J J Sylvester MA, DSc, LID, DC
- 1892 The Reverend C Taylor DD
- 1893 R Wormell MA, DSc
- 1895 Professor Sir Joseph Larmor MA, DSc, FRS
Past presidents of The Mathematical Association have included:
- 1897 Alfred Lodge
- 1899 Professor Sir Robert S Ball LID, FRS
- 1900 Sir Robert Ball, FRS[4]
- 1901 John Fletcher Moulton
- 1903 Andrew Russell Forsyth
- 1905 George Ballard Mathews
- 1907 G H Bryan MA, ScD, FRS
- 1909–1910 H H Turner
- 1911–1912 E W Hobson
- 1913–1914 A G Greenhill
- 1915–1916 A N Whitehead
- 1918–1919 T P Nunn
- 1920 E T Whittaker
- 1921 J M Wilson
- 1922–1923 T L Heath
- 1924–1925 G H Hardy
- 1926–1927 M J M Hill
- 1928–1929 W F Sheppard
- 1930–1931 A S Eddington
- 1932–1933 G N Watson
- 1934 E H Neville[5]
- 1935 A W Siddons
- 1936 A R Forsyth
- 1937 L N G Filon
- 1938 W Hope-Jones
- 1939 W C Fletcher
- 1944 C O Tuckey MA
- 1945 Professor S Chapman DSC, FRs
- 1946 Warin Foster Bushell
- 1947 George Barker Jeffery
- 1948 Sir Harold Spencer Jones MA, ScD, FRS
- 1949 A Robson MA
- 1950 Professor H R Hasse MA, DSc
- 1951 Mary Cartwright
- 1952 K S Snell MA
- 1953 Professor T A A Broadbent MA
- 1954 W V D Hodge
- 1955 G L Parsons MA
- 1956 George Frederick James Temple
- 1957 W J Langford JP, MSc
- 1958 Max Newman
- 1959 Miss L D Adams BSc
- 1960 E.A. Maxwell
- 1961 J T Combridge MA, MSc
- 1962 Professor V C A Ferraro PhD, DIC
- 1963 J B Morgan MA
- 1964 Miss I W Busbridge MA, DPhil, DSc
- 1965 Mrs E M Williams CBE, MA
- 1966 F W Kellaway BSc
- 1967 A.P. Rollett
- 1968 C.A. Coulson
- 1969 Lady Jeffreys MA, PhD
- 1970 James Lighthill
- 1971 B T Bellis MA, FRSE, FIMA
- 1972 C T Daltry BSc, FIMA
- 1973 Professor W H Mccrea MA, PhD, DSc, FRS
- 1974 Mrs M Hayman MA, MPhil, FIMA
- 1975 Reuben Goodstein
- 1976 E Kerr BSc, PhD, FIMA, FBCS
- 1977 Professor G Matthews MA, PhD, FIMA
- 1978 Alan Tammadge MA, FIMA
- 1979 Clive W. Kilmister
- 1980 D A Quadling MA, FIMA, later OBE
- 1981 Michael Atiyah FRS later Sir Michael
- 1982 F J Budden BSc
- 1983 Rolph Ludwig Edward SchwarzenbergerMA, PhD
- 1984 P B Coaker BSc, ARCS, DIC, FIMA, FBCS
- 1985 Miss H B Shuard MA, MSc, FIMA
- 1986 Mrs A Straker BSc, MSc, later OBE
- 1987 Dr M E Rayner MA, DPhil, MSc, later MBE
- 1988 A.G. Howson
- 1989 Mr Peter Reynolds MA
- 1990 Professor Margaret L Brown MA, PhD
- 1991 Dr Alan J Bishop
- 1992 Mr John Hersee MA
- 1993 Dr William Wynne-Wilson BA, PhD
- 1994 Miss Mary Bradburn
- 1995 E. Roy Ashley
- 1996 W. P. Richardson
- 1997 Tony Gardiner
- 1998 Professor J Chris Robson
- 1999 John S Berry
- 2000 Mr Stephen Abbott BSc, MSc
- 2001 Dr Sue Sanders Cert.Ed, BA, MEd, PhD
- 2002 Mr Barry Lewis BSc, BA, FIMA
- 2003 Professor Sir Christopher Zeeman FRS
- 2004 Professor Adam McBride
- 2005 Mrs Sue Singer BA
- 2006 Mr Doug French
- 2007 Mr Rob Eastaway
- 2008 Mr Robert Barbour
- 2009 Mrs Jane Imrie
- 2010 David Acheson
- 2011 Dr Paul Andrews
- 2012 Professor Marcus Du Sautoy
- 2013 Peter Ransom
- 2014 Lynne McClure
- 2015 Peter M Neumann (Current President)
- 2016 Jennie Golding (President Designate)
See also
- Mathematical Association of America
- London Mathematical Society
- Institute of Mathematics and its Applications
References
- ↑ Orton, Anthony (2004). Learning Mathematics: Issues, Theory and Classroom Practice. A&C Black. p. 181. ISBN 0826471137.
- ↑ Flood, Raymond; Rice, Adrian; Wilson, Robin, eds. (2011). Mathematics in Victorian Britain. Oxford University Press. p. 171. ISBN 0-19-162794-1.
- ↑ The Mathematical Association — supporting mathematics in education
- ↑ "Court Circular" The Times (London). Monday, 29 January 1900. (36051), p. 9.
- ↑ MA presidents have served 1 year terms, starting with Neville.
- Siddons, A. W. (1939). "The Mathematical Association—I". Eureka 1: 13–15.
- Siddons, A. W. (1939). "The Mathematical Association—II". Eureka 2: 18–19.
- Michael H Price Mathematics of the Multitude? A History of the Mathematical Association (MA, 1994)
External links
- The Mathematical Association website
- Complete list of Presidents of the Association
- The MA's online shop
- Annual conference
- The Mathematical Gazette No. 1, 30, 31, 37–39, 41, 43 (1901–1904) on the Internet Archive digitised by Google from the Harvard University Library
News items
- Addressing the downward spiral of UK maths education in February 2004
- Proposal to split Maths GCSE into two in August 2003