Abstract

This survey paper examines selected issues related to the intersection of three broad scholarly areas: numeracy, adult education, and vulnerability. Numeracy encompasses the ways in which people cope with the mathematical, quantitative, and statistical demands of adult life, and is viewed as an important outcome of schooling and as a foundational skill for all adults. The focus on vulnerability stems from the realization that concerns of policy makers and educators alike often center on populations seen as vulnerable. The paper is organized in five sections. After a brief introduction, Section 2 examines adult numeracy, focusing on five numeracy domains (health, financial, digital, civic, and workplace numeracy), literacy–numeracy linkages, functional and critical aspects of numeracy, and the centrality of numeracy practices, and notes sources of vulnerability for each of these. Section 3 sketches formal, non-formal and informal contexts in which adults learn or develop their numeracy, and examines factors that may be potential sources of vulnerability, including systemic factors and dispositional and affect factors. Section 4 reflects more broadly on the concept of vulnerability, introduces selected aspects of the papers published in this issue of ZDM Mathematics Education, and points to findings regarding adult learners who may be deemed vulnerable. The closing section summarizes conclusions and research directions regarding the intersection of the three core domains. Overall, the paper points to emerging research needs and educational challenges that are relevant to scholars, practitioners, and policy makers interested in developing the numeracy of adults as well as in the mathematics education of younger learners.

Highlights

  • Adult numeracy is a vital field of interest to societies and economies worldwide, and to the billions of individuals who live in them, and who come from all walks of life and age groups, from young adults and school leavers, all the way to elderly persons

  • The Program for International Student Assessment (PISA), which focuses on school students aged 15 years old, which was implemented in its latest cycle in 2018 in 79 countries, focused on a similar construct, mathematical literacy (Tout and Gal 2015)

  • Due to such needs and gaps, many of the papers in this issue of ZDM Mathematics Education focus on sub-populations with relatively low numeracy proficiency, since such populations often have to cope with multiple vulnerabilities (Grotlüschen et al 2016)

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Summary

Introduction

Adult numeracy is a vital field of interest to societies and economies worldwide, and to the billions of individuals who live in them, and who come from all walks of life and age groups, from young adults and school leavers, all the way to elderly persons. This area holds much promise from educational, research, and policy perspectives This survey paper, together with the 16 papers in this special issue of ZDM Mathematics Education, examines selected topics at the intersection of three broad scholarly areas: numeracy, adult education, and vulnerability, doing so from a lifelong perspective. No examination of the intersection of the areas of numeracy, adult education, and vulnerability has been published to date. Since each of these three areas is in itself a broad domain with extensive literature, a systematic review of them all is beyond the scope of a single paper.

About numeracy of adults and young people
Numeracy needs and gaps
The changing roles and purposes of numeracy in the twenty‐first century
Connections between numeracy and mathematics and literacy and language
Evolving conceptualization of numeracy as functional and critical
Numeracy within adult learning and education
About adult learning and education
Numeracy and numeracy teachers in adult education
About vulnerability
Vulnerability as captured in adult numeracy research
Rationale—why vulnerability and adult numeracy are coupled
How is vulnerability related to separate numeracy domains?
How are functional and critical aspects of numeracy represented?
Discussion and implications
Findings
Research realities
Research directions on adults and numeracy
Full Text
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