BACOMET cannot be evaluated solely on the basis of its publications. It
is important then that the reader, with only this volume on which to
judge both the BACOMET activities and its major outcome to date, should
know some- thing of what preceded this book's publication. For it is the
story of how a group of educators, mainly tutors of student-teachers of
mathematics, com- mitted themselves to a continuing period of work and
self-education. The concept of BACOMET developed during a series of
meetings held in 1978-79 between the three editors, Bent Christiansen,
Geoffrey Howson and Michael Otte, at which we expressed our concern
about the contributions from mathematics education as a discipline to
teacher education, both as we observed it and as we participated in it.
The short time which was at the teacher-educator's disposal, allied to
the limited knowledge and experience of the students on which one had to
build, raised puzzling problems concerning priorities and emphases. The
recognition that these problems were shared by educators from many
different countries was matched by the fact that it would be fruitless
to attempt to search for an internationally (or even nationally)
acceptable solution to our problems. Different contexts and traditions
rule this out.