Part 1 (Numeracy): Using Gale’s lecture, Poirier’s article, and Bear’s article, identify at least three ways in which Inuit mathematics challenge Eurocentric ideas about the purpose of mathematics and the way we learn it.
Growing up, I was constantly told in school that you are either an English person or a math person – never both. As someone who did not particularly excel in math, I just thought that my brain was more tailored to English and lacked some essential math wiring. There were many times that I was able to solve a math problem and find the correct answer using my own agglomeration of made-up steps that made more sense to me. However, because I was not following the teacher’s specific steps, I would get marks docked off. Because I was being punished for using my own strategies, this led me to believe that there was only one right way to do math; therefore, since I did not understand it that way, I was bad at math. Gale’s lecture was eye-opening for me. She states, “We are all mathematical beings, but we all do mathematics in our own way.” She also explains, “We’ve been trained to think that very few of us are [mathematical beings].” Hearing her explain this concept was shocking to me. It made me realize that Eurocentric and colonial ideals of education are still very much embedded in our schooling. Children are taught that there is only one way to do things, just as the colonizers forced First Nations children in residential schools to abandon their cultural forms of knowledge to implement the sole use of Eurocentric knowledge. Continue reading “Blog Post 6 – Numeracy and Literacy”