She was born Claudia Natoma Cohen (later changed to Cogan) on January 12, 1917, in
Upper Manhattan in
New York City and grew up in
Allentown, Pennsylvania. She attributed her first interest in mathematics to her early childhood experiences when she helped her parents in their dry goods store.[1]
In the 1950s while raising her children she was the bookkeeper at
Chelsea Publishing Co. and taught pre-instrument classes to small children.
Math teacher
She became a mathematics teacher at Woodlands High School in
Hartsdale, New York.
She pursued postgraduate study in mathematics education at Teachers College,
Columbia University, in 1974–1978.
During that time she sought to learn about
mathematics in Africa to better capture the interest of the African-American students in her classes.
She discovered "that little of what was known about this topic [African cultural mathematics] was available in accessible sources."[1]
Thus began a years-long project of assembling, organizing and interpreting a vast amount of little-known material on expressions of mathematics in diverse African cultures, including number words and signs, reckoning of time, games, and architectural and decorative patterns. Her field work on a trip to East Africa in 1970 was assisted by the photography of her husband Sam and travel guidance from her son Alan, then teaching in Kenya.[1]
Zaslavsky wrote the book Africa Counts[3] about mathematics in African culture to sum up her discoveries up to that time. [2]
Her work was welcomed into the burgeoning field of
ethnomathematics, which studies the ways in which mathematical concepts are expressed and used by people in diverse cultures in the course of everyday life. As she wrote, "scholars of ethnomathematics examine the practice of mathematics from an anthropological point of view."[1]
Zaslavsky was a lifelong activist for civil rights, peace and social justice. She also mentored many new scholars and activists in the field of ethnomathematics, always remembering the importance of discovering and recognizing the mathematical accomplishments of groups currently underrepresented, including women. As a Jew, Zaslavsky had experienced her own struggles with discrimination against women and Jewish people during her formative years in the 1930s and 1940s.[1]
Personal life
One of her children,
Alan Zaslavsky, became a teacher in
Kenya, a progressive activist, and later a statistician. The other,
Thomas Zaslavsky, became a mathematician.[1]
Beidelman, T. O. (April 1974), Africa: Journal of the International African Institute, 44 (2): 217–218,
doi:
10.2307/3698042,
JSTOR3698042{{
citation}}: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (
link)
Gay, John (Fall 1974), Research in African Literatures, 5 (2): 315–316,
JSTOR3818706{{
citation}}: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (
link)
McCall, Daniel F. (1975), The International Journal of African Historical Studies, 8: 49–52,
doi:
10.2307/217619,
JSTOR217619{{
citation}}: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (
link)