Voices from the Schoolroom: mathematics education in England, 1650–1750

Summary

 

This three-year, AHRC-funded project explores how mathematics was taught in England between 1650 and 1750, and how that teaching evolved in response to the social, political, and economic changes of the period.

The period saw a population-level shift: from widespread indifference to widespread conviction of the essential importance of mathematics. It saw a corresponding shift in individual attitudes to learning mathematics, and to teaching it. And it saw changes in the policies of institutions such as trade guilds, the Navy and the Army towards mathematical education and its utility.

Our project uses newly digitised, newly catalogued and newly discovered manuscript sources, such as schoolbooks, school curricula, letters, and diaries, as well as the riches of early modern print, to explore how these changes played out in the lives of individual students and teachers. It looks at the individual decision to learn mathematics, the individual or institutional decision to teach it, and how and why those decisions were made. It looks at the careers of individual mathematical teachers, and at the trajectories of those they taught: how they embedded their new mathematical skills – and their new-found attitudes to mathematics – into their everyday and professional lives.

Ranging across grammar schools, private academies, charity schools, artisan workshops, and the activities of private tutors and professional instructors, and paying particular attention to the mathematical education of girls and of children from poor backgrounds, the project is producing a rich, detailed picture of how mathematical learning became embedded in early modern English culture, preparing the way for the industrial and economic changes of the later eighteenth century.

Objectives

 

How did mathematics acquire its present position of social and cultural importance? How did the European world of ideas move from the sixteenth-century vision of a closed set of ‘mixed sciences’ to the eighteenth century’s sense of mathematics’ almost  unbounded usefulness and importance to economic wellbeing? How did specific regions, countries and populations experience that shift, and how did individuals actually acquire new knowledge and new attitudes about mathematics?

These top-level questions about the social and cultural trajectory of mathematics lie behind this project and shape its work. Our project focuses on mathematical teaching and learning in England from 1650 to 1750, a case study which enables us to consider both the genesis of scientific societies and periodicals, and the earliest stages of industrialisation, and to probe in detail how individual and collective experiences of mathematics impacted the path from the one to the other. Who learned mathematics, and where; what mathematics did they learn, and who was left behind? Who acquired a belief in the epistemic importance of mathematics, and who remained sceptical? Who accepted the new narrative about the economic and personal importance of mathematics, and who resisted? Who actually benefited personally by learning mathematics, and how; and who, again, was left behind?

This project examines how the attitudes and agendas of those with political and intellectual power created change in mathematical education; but it also foregrounds the agency and agendas of those who taught and learned, and who by doing so created the modern location of mathematics in culture.

People

 

Benjamin Wardhaugh

Benjamin Wardhaugh is a leading historian of mathematics with seventeen book-length publications since 2007 and more than thirty peer-reviewed chapters and articles. Trained in mathematics, music, and history at Cambridge, London, and Oxford, he has held fellowships at institutions including All Souls College and the Warburg Institute. His scholarship ranges across early modern musical tuning, the Royal Society, and mathematical language in Latin and vernacular contexts. He has also created major open-access reference resources and helped shift the field toward social, cultural, and intellectual history. He is active in editorial, leadership, and public engagement work.

https://www.benjaminwardhaugh.co.uk 

Philip Beeley

Philip Beeley is an internationally respected historian of science and mathematics with a doctorate from the TU Berlin. He has written or co-edited thirteen book-length publications, including six volumes of scientific correspondence, and published over thirty peer-reviewed articles. His work focuses on the transmission and dissemination of scientific ideas in the early modern world, the role of mathematics in practical settings, and its links to the book trade. He has mined extensive archival sources and extended digital methods through collaborative projects. Philip has held research fellowships in Scotland and Ireland and has played major leadership roles in scholarly societies and on editorial projects.

Yelda Nasifoglu

Yelda Nasifoglu is a highly regarded early career researcher working at the intersection of the history of mathematics, book history, architecture, and early modern scientific practice. Her doctoral research on Robert Hooke explored the relation between his experimental and architectural work, showing how knowledge moved between disciplines. She has helped build digital resources such as the Robert Hooke’s Books database and has contributed technical and organizational skills to collaborative projects and exhibitions. Her current work at Cambridge examines the translation and reception of Vitruvius’s De architectura in early modern England. She has also helped foster digital scholarship and interdisciplinary exchange through networked research activity.

maths

A scene of mathematical learning in 1680.