Birth Date: | 4 February 1933 |
Birth Place: | Taza, French Morocco |
Nationality: | French |
Occupation: | Mathematician |
Honours: | Felix Klein Medal (2003) |
Guy Brousseau (4 February 1933 – 15 February 2024) was a French mathematics educationalist.
Guy Brousseau was born on 4 February 1933, in Taza, Morocco. From an early age, he wanted to become a primary school teacher, which he did for several years until he was recruited as an assistant at Bordeaux University. From 1967 to 1969, he was Director of the Centre de recherches pour l'enseignement des mathématiques at the CRDP de Bordeaux, and in 1969 became Assistant of Mathematics at the Faculté des Sciences de Bordeaux. In 1968, he obtained a bachelor's degree in mathematics and a bachelor's degree in educational science.
Brousseau began his career as a teacher in 1953. He began publishing in 1961, followed by a textbook for the first year of elementary school (1965), and continued to publish in the scientific field. In the late 1960s, after obtaining a degree in mathematics, he joined the University of Bordeaux.
Brousseau founded COREM (Centre pour l'Observation et la Recherche sur l'Enseignement des Mathématiques), which he ran from 1973 to 1998 at the Jules Michelet elementary school in Talence (Gironde).[1] The school went on to achieve international renown. He subsequently founded the LADIST (Laboratoire Aquitain de Didactique des Sciences et Techniques), which supported COREM.[2]
In 1986, he obtained a doctorate in science and, in 1991, became a university professor at the newly-created IUFM d'Aquitaine, where he worked until 1998. He decided to create the CREM (Centre de Recherche pour l'Enseignement des Mathématiques) in Bordeaux following his meeting with André Lichnerowicz. He was Professor Emeritus at the IUFM d'Aquitaine. He also held honorary doctorates from the University of Montreal (1997) and the University of Geneva (2004).
His main theoretical contribution is the theory of didactic situations,[3] a theory initiated in the early 1970s. Together with Gérard Vergnaud's conceptual field theory[4] and Yves Chevallard's anthropological theory of didactics,[5] it forms one of the three main theoretical frameworks of the French school of mathematics didactics.
Brousseau published numerous works on mathematics from 1965 to 2001, with the help of numerous collaborators.
Brousseau carried out a large number of research and training missions in Europe, Latin America and North America, as well as in North Africa and Southeast Asia. His research focuses on the teaching of natural and decimal numbers, probability, statistics, geometry, elementary algebra, logic and reasoning.[6]
Brousseau died on 15 February 2024, at the age of 91.[7]
In 2003, Brousseau was awarded the first Felix Klein Medal by the International Commission on Mathematical Instruction.[8]