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Public Lectures with Leverhulme Visiting Professor Helena Osana 

28 April 2026

3 mins

The Department of Mathematics Education is pleased to host a series of three public lectures with Leverhulme Visiting Professor Helena Osana from Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.

Helena Osana a Professor of Mathematics Education at Concordia University where she is the Principal Investigator of the Mathematics Teaching and Learning Lab. Her particular research interests are in the area of children’s mathematical development, learning and instruction, and mathematical cognition. You can find more about her work here.

All lectures are open to the public and no booking is required.

For further information, please contact the Centre for Mathematical Cognition.

Finding One: Units in the Elementary Mathematics Curriculum

Date: Wednesday 20 May 2026
Time: 16:00 – 17:00
Location: Schofield Building, SCH101, Loughborough University, Epinal Way, LE11 3TU

A unit is what we call “one.” This lecture examines where “one” appears—and often hides—in the elementary mathematics curriculum. It traces how units structure the big ideas in elementary mathematics, including numeration and place value, multidigit arithmetic, multiplication and division, and fractions. The talk highlights how seemingly disparate domains in school mathematics are tied together by unit concepts and how understanding in mathematics is dependent on flexible and relational reasoning about units and “oneness.”

Understanding One: Challenges in Children’s Understanding of Units

Date: Wednesday 10 June 2026
Time: 14:00 – 15:00
Location: Schofield Building, SCH101, Loughborough University, Epinal Way, LE11 3TU

This lecture focuses on children’s understanding of units from early counting to more advanced concepts involving measurement and composite units. It reviews research on how children construct the idea of “one” as both a countable entity and a unit that can be iterated and nested within higher-order structures. Common difficulties are examined, including treating collections of units as wholes, coordinating multiple units, and understanding number as a structure of embedded units. Together, these perspectives provide a nuanced account of why unit concepts are persistently challenging.

Supporting One: Supporting Children’s Unit Understanding

Date: Tuesday 7 July 2026
Time: 14:00 – 15:00
Location: Schofield Building, SCH101, Loughborough University, Epinal Way, LE11 3TU

This lecture explores how learning environments and instructional approaches might support the development of robust unit understanding in children. The lecture will describe what is known about how environmental factors, such as visual representations and narrative, may play a role in children’s interpretation of “oneness” and in coordinating groups of discrete elements into structured, countable units. Promising early evidence will be presented on how to support children’s learning of embedded units in base-ten through instruction that explicitly foregrounds unit structure and supports analogical mapping across representations. Implications for curriculum design and classroom practice will be addressed.

Centre for Mathematical Cognition

We write mostly about mathematics education, numerical cognition and general academic life. Our centre’s research is wide-ranging, so there is something for everyone: teachers, researchers and general interest. This blog is managed by Joanne Eaves and Chris Shore, researchers at the CMC, who edits and typesets all posts. Please email j.eaves@lboro.ac.uk if you have any feedback or if you would like information about being a guest contributor. We hope you enjoy our blog!

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