ABSTRACT

The second edition of Mark Wolfmeyer’s award-winning primer offers future and current math teachers an introduction to the connections that exist between mathematics and a critical orientation to education, one that accounts for race, social class, gender, sexuality, language diversity, and ability.

Expanded and updated from the first edition, this book demonstrates how elements of human diversity and intersectionality have real effects in the mathematics classroom, and prepares teachers with a more critical math education that increases accessibility and equity for all students. By refocusing math learning toward the goals of democracy and social and environmental crises, the book also introduces readers to broader contemporary school policy and reform debates and struggles, especially in light of Covid-19 and the ongoing struggle for racial equity.

Featuring concrete strategies and examples in both formal and informal educational settings, as well as discussion questions for teachers and students, text boxes with examples of critical education in practice, a glossary, and suggestions for further reading, Mark Wolfmeyer shows how critical mathematics education can be put into practice, relevant for undergraduate and graduate students in education, current teachers, and teacher educators.

chapter 1|18 pages

What is mathematics?

Answers from mathematicians, historians, philosophers, and anthropologists

chapter 2|11 pages

Reform mathematics teaching

The student-centered approach

chapter 4|16 pages

A white institutional space

Race and mathematics education

chapter 5|13 pages

Social class hierarchies and mathematics education

To reproduce or interrupt?

chapter 6|15 pages

Gender trouble

Rationalism vs. masculinity in mathematics education

chapter 7|13 pages

LGBTQ+ work

Outing mathematics for heteronormativity and homophobia

chapter 8|13 pages

Dissolving ability binaries in mathematics education

From special education law to disability studies

chapter 9|13 pages

Language diversity as an asset

Emergent bilinguals in the mathematics classroom

chapter 10|12 pages

Putting it all together

Intersectionality revisited, current mathematics education policy, and further avenues for exploration