Re-imagining mathematics and mathematics education for equity and social justice in the changing South African university

Debates about transformation for a more equitable and socially just South African university and society more broadly have highlighted the need to consider how university curricula (re)produce enduring historical and societal inequities, and to bring student voices into conversations about reimagini...

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Main Author: Kate le Roux
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Western Cape 2016-12-01
Series:Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cristal.epubs.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/74#.WFqC67Z97-Y
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spelling doaj-729a4db7a5f344b0b438a7874a98eb722020-11-24T23:50:59ZengUniversity of the Western CapeCritical Studies in Teaching and Learning2310-71032016-12-0142456710.14426/cristal.v4i2.7447Re-imagining mathematics and mathematics education for equity and social justice in the changing South African universityKate le Roux0University of Cape TownDebates about transformation for a more equitable and socially just South African university and society more broadly have highlighted the need to consider how university curricula (re)produce enduring historical and societal inequities, and to bring student voices into conversations about reimagining these curricula. Strikingly, what has remained silent in these crucial debates is the role that the practices of mathematics and mathematics education and the language use in these practices may play (re)produce or transform existing inequities. This conceptual article seeks to insert these practices into these crucial debates by proposing tools that help us, firstly, to understand and to challenge the silence about the practices in the historical and socio-political context of the South African university. Secondly these tools can be used to reimagine mathematics and mathematics education for equity and social justice in the changing South African university. The key conceptual tools - a socio-political perspective and equity as access, achievement, identity and power are drawn mainly from the work of critical mathematics educators Rochelle Gutiérrez, Ole Skovsmose, Paola Valero and Renuka Vithal and the critical linguist Norman Fairclough. To illustrate the potential of these conceptual tools I use the voices and actions of university students as represented in my research conducted at an elite, historically white university in South Africa.http://cristal.epubs.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/74#.WFqC67Z97-Ysocio-political perspectiveaccessachievementequityidentityuniversity mathematicsmathematics educationpower
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kate le Roux
spellingShingle Kate le Roux
Re-imagining mathematics and mathematics education for equity and social justice in the changing South African university
Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
socio-political perspective
access
achievement
equity
identity
university mathematics
mathematics education
power
author_facet Kate le Roux
author_sort Kate le Roux
title Re-imagining mathematics and mathematics education for equity and social justice in the changing South African university
title_short Re-imagining mathematics and mathematics education for equity and social justice in the changing South African university
title_full Re-imagining mathematics and mathematics education for equity and social justice in the changing South African university
title_fullStr Re-imagining mathematics and mathematics education for equity and social justice in the changing South African university
title_full_unstemmed Re-imagining mathematics and mathematics education for equity and social justice in the changing South African university
title_sort re-imagining mathematics and mathematics education for equity and social justice in the changing south african university
publisher University of the Western Cape
series Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
issn 2310-7103
publishDate 2016-12-01
description Debates about transformation for a more equitable and socially just South African university and society more broadly have highlighted the need to consider how university curricula (re)produce enduring historical and societal inequities, and to bring student voices into conversations about reimagining these curricula. Strikingly, what has remained silent in these crucial debates is the role that the practices of mathematics and mathematics education and the language use in these practices may play (re)produce or transform existing inequities. This conceptual article seeks to insert these practices into these crucial debates by proposing tools that help us, firstly, to understand and to challenge the silence about the practices in the historical and socio-political context of the South African university. Secondly these tools can be used to reimagine mathematics and mathematics education for equity and social justice in the changing South African university. The key conceptual tools - a socio-political perspective and equity as access, achievement, identity and power are drawn mainly from the work of critical mathematics educators Rochelle Gutiérrez, Ole Skovsmose, Paola Valero and Renuka Vithal and the critical linguist Norman Fairclough. To illustrate the potential of these conceptual tools I use the voices and actions of university students as represented in my research conducted at an elite, historically white university in South Africa.
topic socio-political perspective
access
achievement
equity
identity
university mathematics
mathematics education
power
url http://cristal.epubs.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/74#.WFqC67Z97-Y
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