Building Community to Center Equity and Justice in Mathematics Teacher Education - by Courtney Koestler & Eva Thanheiser (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- This new volume of the Association of Mathematics Teacher Educators (AMTE) Professional Book Series provides mathematics teacher educators practical ideas of how to build community to center conversations and action on equity and justice in mathematics teacher education.
- About the Author: Courtney Koestler, PhD, is the director of the OHIO Center for Equity in Mathematics and Science and an associate professor of teacher education in the Patton College of Education at Ohio University, USA.
- 498 Pages
- Education, Professional Development
- Series Name: The Association of Mathematics Teacher Educators (Amte) Professional Book
Description
About the Book
This new volume of the Association of Mathematics Teacher Educators (AMTE) Professional Book Series provides mathematics teacher educators practical ideas of how to build community to center conversations and action on equity and justice in mathematics teacher education.
Book Synopsis
This new volume of the Association of Mathematics Teacher Educators (AMTE) Professional Book Series provides mathematics teacher educators practical ideas of how to build community to center conversations and action on equity and justice in mathematics teacher education. This 24-case collection of experiences from mathematics teacher educators (MTEs) expresses how they build community in the following kinds of settings in order to provide examples of how this work can be done in a variety of MTE contexts: Cases to Build Community with Prospective Teachers; Cases to Build Community in Professional Development with Practicing Teachers; and Cases to Build Community with Graduate Students and Fellow Mathematics (Teacher) Educators.
This book is written from and with a critical, practitioner stance and provides a variety of research-based cases (e.g., scenarios, tasks, modules, activities) to support MTEs to build community in mathematics teacher education courses and professional development collaborations. Creating learning communities that center on the joy, beauty, resiliency and variety of experiences and ways of knowing community members, particularly marginalized communities, is critical to promote agency and action that can support critical conversations that disrupt oppression in mathematics and mathematics teacher education.
About the Author
Courtney Koestler, PhD, is the director of the OHIO Center for Equity in Mathematics and Science and an associate professor of teacher education in the Patton College of Education at Ohio University, USA.
Eva Thanheiser, PhD, is a professor of mathematics education and the chair in the Fariborz Maseeh Department of Mathematics and Statistics at Portland State University, USA.