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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Valerie N. Faulkner , Patricia L. Marshall , Lee V. StiffPublisher: Rowman & Littlefield Imprint: Rowman & Littlefield Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.90cm , Length: 23.10cm Weight: 0.236kg ISBN: 9781475841633ISBN 10: 1475841639 Pages: 160 Publication Date: 31 July 2019 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviewsRadical responses to oppression and dehumanization in mathematics education will require re-imagining new and different possibilities that do not produce new and different forms of oppression and dehumanization. This book takes up the challenge of re-imagining by telling a different story about so-called racial achievement gaps that position Black students as inferior. They recast the story in terms of opportunity and decision-making in the system that often fails Black students. -- Danny Bernard Martin, professor, education and mathematics, University of Illinois at Chicago The Stories We Tell: Math, Race, Bias & Opportunity challenges the traditional dialogue about the achievement gap and radically reframes it. By problematizing data, ability grouping, and growth mindset, the authors provide new lenses by which we can examine these constructs with the goal of compelling us to think critically about our role in maintaining or changing the system. The authors offer a solid theoretical framing paired with practical recommendations for practice. This book is a must-read for anyone involved in making decisions related to the teaching and learning of mathematics. -- Marrielle Myers, Associate Professor of Elementary Mathematics Education, Kennesaw State University The Stories We Tell: Math, Race, Bias, and Opportunity pushes readers to consider the many factors, decisions, and opportunities that contribute to differentials in achievement. The authors describe these as `gap makers' which are fully examined as contributors to differences in achievement among learners. Readers are asked, What if the students are not the problem to be fixed? This book provides a framing for consideration towards the answer to this question by unpacking the many factors, decisions, and opportunities in a context that is accessible to educators across the grade bands. Educators will find that use of different contexts and vignettes provides connections that give meaning to why some students have an engaging mathematics experience built on high expectations with access to rigorous mathematics and, other students do not have access to this type of mathematics experiences. I will use this book with educators who influence policies as well as mathematics teachers and coaches to help examine the structural issues and the decisions that impact mathematics teaching and learning. -- Robert Q. Berry, Professor of Mathematics Education, University of Virginia; President, National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (2018-2020) Finally, a book that sits the gap problem on the doorsteps of schools and districts and off the backs of children and parents. In this book, the authors use data to challenge our assumptions on achievement, rigor, and accountability as they explain how the decisions made by school administrations and politicians create, maintain, and exasperate the inequitable education of students. The authors provide new and realistic decisions we can all make to travel on their path to change. -- Dorothy Y. White, PhD, Associate Professor of Mathematics Education, University of Georgia The school mathematics ecosystem represents an important opportunity structure in the field of education. This research captures the contours of this ecosystem with a focus on how it produces disparities. The book documents the challenges associated with improper data interpretation, bias, and cognitive dissonance. These biases influence decisions and support the creation of underdeveloped learning processes and harmful outcomes. The scholarship contributes to the literature on opportunity to learn in mathematics education. -- William F. Tate IV, Edward Mallinckrodt Distinguished University Professor in Arts & Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis Radical responses to oppression and dehumanization in mathematics education will require re-imagining new and different possibilities that do not produce new and different forms of oppression and dehumanization. This book takes up the challenge of re-imagining by telling a different story about so-called racial achievement gaps that position Black students as inferior. They recast the story in terms of opportunity and decision-making in the system that often fails Black students. -- Danny Bernard Martin, professor, education and mathematics, University of Illinois at Chicago Author InformationDr. Valerie N. Faulkner is a Teaching Associate Professor in Elementary Education in the Department of Teacher Education and Learning Sciences at NC State University. Her current work focuses on K-2 mathematics education and issues of access and equity within schools. Dr. Patricia L. Marshall is a Professor of Multicultural Studies in the Department of Teacher Education and Learning Sciences at NC State University. She is interested in the impact of elements of culture including race, class, language on the teaching-learning process and teachers’ acquisition of cross-cultural competency. Dr. Lee V. Stiff is Professor of Mathematics Education in the Department of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics Education and Associate Dean for Faculty and Academic Affairs in the College of Education at NC State University. He is interested in affecting change that promotes the mathematics education of all students by effectively using data to better align existing resources to address issues of equity, student access to high-quality math courses, and course placement disparities. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |