Rightful Presence in Times of Crisis and Uprisings: A Call for Disobedience

Cathery Yeh, Paolo Tan, Daniel L. Reinholz

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Borders—territorial, economic, political, and ideological—are processes of social division. They monitor and exclude and are regulated, patrolled, and maintained by an array of power regimes, but borderlands are also sites of movement, agency, and resistance. Likewise,  mathematics  is used as  a  border that divides and politicizes.  In  this article, we seek to explore how the field can disrupt and transform borders  in   mathematics   education . We draw on border and third space theories to challenge the ontological and epistemological borders  in   mathematics   education  that are taken as normative yet reify exclusion through the following questions: (1) What is  mathematics ? (2) Who can do  mathematics ? (3) Where is  mathematics  done? We situate these questions within the COVID-19 pandemic as context of continued injustice. We call for the field to be disobedient and ready itself for the changes that must come so the field can create  a   humanizing  and just alternative.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalEquity and Excellence in Education
Volume54
DOIs
StatePublished - 2021

Disciplines

  • Education

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