成功的黑人数学教师培养黑人女孩的集体、自主性和数学专业知识

Brittany L. Marshall, Aziel O. Rosado, Dan Battey
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:传统的数学逻辑导致不平等,再现了诸如种族化和性别化的数学能力等级神话等叙事(Hottinger, 2016;马丁,2009)。黑人女孩在种族化和性别化的等级制度中都处于最底层;然而,过去十年的研究提供的证据表明,黑人教师为他们的黑人学生挑战这些等级制度。因此,我们展示了两位老师如何违背这些逻辑,为他们的黑人女学生创造空间,让她们成为数学的学习者和创造者。研究重点:本研究记录了两个黑人数学教师课堂中导致黑人女孩支持空间的逻辑:支持黑人女孩在中学课堂上取得成就的成功数学教师的支持逻辑是什么?背景:本研究是对盖茨资助的理解教学质量(UTQ)项目收集的视频进行二次分析。个案研究选择:本研究采用多元方差分析方法,根据数学成绩的变化,定量地选择教师。两名教师是根据在整个数据集中成绩变化前5%的黑人女孩的数量和百分比选出的。虽然不是选拔标准的一部分,但两位数学老师都认定为布莱克。研究设计:本研究采用案例研究设计来描述两位成功的黑人数学教师的数学实践和逻辑。数据收集和分析:数据集包括每位教师四节课,每节课两个摄像头。开放编码被用来识别教师使用的实践,将逻辑作为导向概念。研究发现:有趣的是,两间教室的数学重点都相当程序化;然而,这些课堂挑战了个人主义的逻辑、种族化和性别化的数学能力等级,以及狭隘的教学法。教师支持黑人学生在行为和智力贡献方面的自主权,并特别将黑人女孩定位为专家,强调对同龄人数学学习的集体责任。结论:虽然课堂没有表现出文化相关教学法所必需的文化能力或社会政治意识,但黑人教师确实挑战了数学课堂中的传统逻辑。通过对集体、自主和能力的关注,教师对黑人女孩的关系方式与经常将她们视为数学能力不足的逻辑背道而驰。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Successful Black Mathematics Teachers Building Collectivity, Autonomy, and Mathematics Expertise of Their Black Girls
Background: Traditional mathematics logics lead to inequities that reproduce narratives such as the myths of racialized and gendered hierarchies of mathematical ability (Hottinger, 2016; Martin, 2009). Black girls sit at the bottom of both racialized and gendered hierarchies; however, research over the past decade has provided evidence that Black teachers challenge these hierarchies for their Black students. Therefore, we show how two teachers work against these logics to create space for their Black girl students to flourish as learners and producers of mathematics. Focus of Study: This research documents the logics that lead to supportive spaces for Black girls in two Black mathematics teachers’ classrooms: What are the supportive logics of successful mathematics teachers who support Black girls’ achievement in middle school classrooms? Setting: This research was a secondary analysis of videos collected as part of the Gates-funded Understanding Teaching Quality (UTQ) project. Case Study Selection: The study used MANOVA to quantitatively select teachers based on change in mathematics achievement. Two teachers were selected based on number and percentage of Black girls in the top 5% of change in achievement across the dataset. Although not part of the selection criteria, both mathematics teachers identified as Black. Research Design: The study used a case study design to describe the mathematics practices and the logics that they supported for the two successful Black mathematics teachers. Data Collection and Analysis: The dataset included four lessons per teacher with two cameras for each lesson. Open coding was used to identify the practices used by teachers drawing on logics as an orienting concept. Findings: Interestingly, both classrooms were fairly procedural in their mathematics focus; however, the classrooms challenged logics of individualism, racialized and gendered hierarchies of mathematics ability, and carceral pedagogy. Teachers supported Black student autonomy in terms of both behavior and intellectual contribution, and specifically positioned Black girls as experts and highlighted collective responsibility for peers’ mathematics learning. Conclusions: Although the classrooms did not display the cultural competence or sociopolitical consciousness foundational to culturally relevant pedagogy, the Black teachers did challenge traditional logics found in mathematics classrooms. Through a focus on collectivity, autonomy, and competence, the relational ways in which teachers positioned Black girls ran counter to logics that too often frame them as incapable mathematically.
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