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Obituary: Dick Tahta

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  • Obituary: Dick Tahta

    Obituary

    Dick Tahta

    A maths teacher with gusto, he inspired the schoolboy Hawking


    Geoffrey Hoare and Eric Love
    Friday January 5, 2007
    Guardian
    Dick Tahta, who has died aged 78, was one of the outstanding
    mathematics teachers of his generation. In a national advertising
    campaign to attract recruits to the profession, the theoretical
    physicist Stephen Hawking was among famous people asked to name one
    teacher who had inspired them: "Mr Tahta," was Hawking's response.

    Dick was born in Manchester, where his Armenian parents set up home
    after the first world war war. From Rossall school, in Fleetwood,
    Lancashire, he gained a scholarship to Christ Church, Oxford, in
    1946. Mathematics was his main subject, but he read widely and
    intensively - English literature, philosophy and history - at a
    formidable speed. A book a day was his norm for 60 years.

    National service in the RAF (1950-52) was followed by six months in
    Florence absorbing Italian language and art before finding a career
    suited to his quicksilver intellect. First he tried journalism, which
    taught him to write clearly and unpretentiously.

    In 1954 he was invited back to Rossall school to teach English and
    history.Gradually a few mathematics lessons were introduced, and Dick
    found he enjoyed teaching them. He then took up the subject in
    earnest, moving next year to St Albans school, Hertfordshire, where
    Hawking was a pupil. During six years there, he married his wife
    Hilary and began the sideline of restoring houses as his family
    grew. His energy and capacity for hard work were daunting, and he had
    a gusto that made students and friends feel more alive.

    His reputation brought him the post of lecturer in mathematics
    education atExeter University in 1961, and there he built up a
    wonderful network of students and teachers in West Country schools. A
    magical teacher, he enjoyed the lively interaction of the
    classroom. His postgraduates found themselves making 8mm animated
    films, exploring Dartmoor, and even baking as part of maths
    teaching. He wanted to liberate the typical mathematics psyche,
    sometimes trapped in narrow abstract byways.

    His openness matched the openness of the 1960s, and his interest in
    the creative divergent mind led him to experiment with contemporary
    music and art. In the basement of his family's Regency house in
    Exeter, students and teachers could try their hand at sculpture and
    painting.

    Dick was a perfectionist: he used to laugh at his extreme tidiness and
    perfect file boxes; then he would go off to read about problems of
    consciousnessand the senses.

    He was a leading member of the Association of Teachers of Mathematics
    (ATM), propagating ideas and influence throughout his career with a
    deep belief in the value of cooperative effort. Thus he was part of
    the ATM collective which in the 1960s wrote the influential books Some
    Lessons in Mathematics, Notes on Mathematics in Primary Schools and
    Mathematical Reflections. He founded and edited the ATM journal
    Recognitions, and was co-editor of another ATMpublication, Mathematics
    Teaching, from 1983 to 1987.

    >From 1960 until earlier this year, he wrote articles in mathematics
    education journals. These and his book contributions reflected his
    interests - Renaissance painting, church history, poetry and
    linguistics among them. In 1972, from his work with local teachers,
    he co-authored Starting Points, which became a seminal book for
    mathematics teachers. Throughout the 1970s he gave much energy to
    Leapfrogs, a group of mathematics educators who produced a range of
    innovative teaching materials and went on to make a ground-breaking
    educational TV mathematics series - first called Leapfrogs; later
    Junior Maths - which ran for 12 years. He forcefully promoted visual
    approaches to mathematics and was instrumental in getting
    mathematical film more widely used -especially the geometric films of
    Jean-Louis Nicolet and Caleb Gattegno.

    Dick was part of the team that produced the ATM book Geometric Images,
    and co-authored Images of Infinity for the Leapfrogs group. Geometry
    was one of his enthusiasms and he eagerly embraced the possibilities
    that computer software brought to its study. But the visual was always
    a means to each learner's inner world of mathematics. Dick had
    pondered deeply the human side of mathematics, and brought to teaching
    insights into the psychology of learning,whether of the active life of
    young boys and girls or the emotional needs of adolescents, and his
    eclectic vision embraced psychoanalytical approaches to child
    development. In working with adults his awareness of group dynamics,
    his ability to support others, and a continual questioning of his own
    rolemade working with him a journey of discovery. At the end of the
    1970s, the school of education at Exeter became a vast new
    institution, and Dick took early retirement in 1981. He went to teach
    in America and South Africa, and contributed to courses at Warwick and
    the Open University.

    Fascinated by minor Victorian amateur mathematicians, he delved into
    the papers of the photography pioneer William Fox Talbot, who had
    published mathematical results when younger. Dick's last book,
    published days before his death, was on another Victorian, the
    clergyman and amateur mathematician ThomasKirkman, known for the
    Fifteen Schoolgirls, a problem in combinatorics.

    After some years in London, he moved to Bradford-on-Avon in Wiltshire,
    where he lived, appropriately, in a weaver's house. He was a star in
    the local Shakespeare society, at Bath, and worked for Relate, the
    marriage guidance charity, while Hilary practised as a
    psychotherapist. Theirs was a marriage oftrue minds. In the last year,
    he produced a thoughtful book, called Ararat Associations, linking
    Atom Egoyan's film Ararat (2002) with his own life andthe history of
    Armenia. He was a wise and generous man who inspired love and an
    increase of intellectual energy in everyone who came within his ambit.

    Hilary died in 2000; Dick is survived by three daughters and a son.

    · Dikran Tahta, mathematician, teacher and author, born August 7
    1928;died December 2 2006

    Guardian Unlimited © Guardian News and Media Limited 2007
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