MATHEMATICAL PROBLEM SOLVING IN JUGYOKENKYU THROUGH THE VOICES OF JAPANESE AUTHORS

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37781/vidya.v45i2.5612

Keywords:

Lesson Study; Teacher training; Math problems; Japan; Lesson planning

Abstract

This bibliographical article critically discusses the perspectives of Japanese authors on mathematical problem-solving within the framework of Jugyokenkyu - the Japanese educational modus vivendi for teacher professional development. Drawing on Japanese primary sources, the study highlights that problem-solving is not an ancillary technique, but rather the epistemological and didactic principle that structures and gives meaning to the entire Jugyokenkyu cycle. The articulated discussion demonstrates that selecting a single, “rich” problem, followed by the stages of kikan-jyunshi, neriage, and matome, is fundamental to fostering autonomous mathematical thinking and the collaborative construction of knowledge. We conclude that Japanese students’ learning is intrinsically linked to their centrality in problem-solving, warning of the risk of its depletion when Jugyokenkyu is uncritically transposed to other cultural contexts.

Author Biography

Maria Alice Veiga Ferreira de Souza, Instituto Federal do Espírito Santo - IFES

Doutora em Psicologia da Educação Matemática (Unicamp). Professora titular do Instituto Federal do Espírito Santo.

Published

2025-12-23

How to Cite

de Souza, M. A. V. F. (2025). MATHEMATICAL PROBLEM SOLVING IN JUGYOKENKYU THROUGH THE VOICES OF JAPANESE AUTHORS. VIDYA, 45(2), 371–390. https://doi.org/10.37781/vidya.v45i2.5612