Difference between pages "Mathematics educators on Twitter" and "Gutiérrez (2018)"

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Twitter launched in July of 2006 and offers asynchronous following (you can follow someone without them following you back), a mostly chronological timeline (some conversations are pulled together in users' timelines to make them easier to follow), direct messaging, and relatively short posts limited to 140 characters. Originally described as a "microblogging" service, Twitter use for many has evolved into something more conversational as small groups chat back-and-forth and share links and pictures.
{{Title|Political Conocimiento for Teaching Mathematics: Why Teachers Need It and How to Develop It}}


Twitter is home to one of the most active [[online communities of mathematics educators]]. Mathematics teachers who regularly use Twitter generally use it to converse and share links to resources or information relevant to mathematics education. Some math teachers on Twitter refer to their community as the "MathTwitterBlogoSphere," or MTBoS. Twitter's key organizational feature is hashtags, and mathematics teachers on Twitter use them to organize "chats" (such as [https://twitter.com/search?q=%23mathchat #mathchat]) or to share during conferences or other events.
* Author: [[Rochelle Gutiérrez]]
* Book: [[Building Support for Scholarly Practices in Mathematics Methods]]
* Year: [[2018]]
* Publisher: Information Age Publishing
* Source: http://www.infoagepub.com/products/Building-Support-for-Scholarly-Practices-in-Mathematics-Methods


It is difficult to estimate the number of mathematics teachers who use Twitter and how many of those primarily use their account to communicate about issues related to mathematics education. As of May 2015, a directory built by [[Jed Butler]] for people who identify themselves as part of the MathTwitterBlogoSphere (https://sites.google.com/site/mtbosdirectory/) had 280 self-registered users. A Twitter list maintained by [[Raymond Johnson]] (https://twitter.com/MathEdnet/lists/mathed) had over 1100 users, while [[David Wees]], whose following list is mostly made of people related to mathematics education, had more than 5200 people.
== Outline of Headings ==
* Politics of Teaching Mathematics
** All Teaching is Political
** All Mathematics Teaching is Political
** All Mathematics Teachers Need Political Knowledge to Be Successful
* Political Conocimiento for Teaching
** Creative Insubordination
** Teacher Education Programs Can Develop Political Knowledge
*** Conceptual Framework
*** The Mirror Test
*** In My Shoes
** Teachers Learning Political Conocimiento
* Conclusion


== Organization ==
== Summary ==
Twitter's popularity among mathematics educators relative to other social networks seems to come from its low barriers to creating an account and some sense that posting is low-risk due to the size of a Tweet and the ephemeral nature of Twitter content. The asynchronous following structure is also useful, allowing new users to follow many others without needing those users to follow back.


Defining a "community" on Twitter is difficult because the service itself does little to help users identify themselves as part of a community. Each user chooses their own set of accounts to follow, unlike an internet forum or listserv where joining automatically connects a user with other users joining the same service. The primary Twitter feature used to bring people together are ''hashtags'', labels typed into posts that can identify the post as part of a larger conversation, or "chat."
In this chapter, [[Rochelle Gutiérrez]] argues that teachers' knowledge of the politics of teaching is lacking compared to their knowledge of content and pedagogy. Because of this, teachers are more likely to carry on the practices and traditions of their schools and are less likely to challenge assumptions or advocate for the needs of students, particularly those who have been historically underserved. She begins the chapter:


=== The MathTwitterBlogoSphere ===
<blockquote>Contrary to popular belief and research, addressing equity in mathematics education will not simply come once teachers understand the content they are to teach; when they find accessible, quality, or motivating activities and instructional strategies to use with students; or even when they develop meaningful relationships with students. Many teachers find their biggest struggle lies in understanding and negotiating the politics in their everyday practice. This is particularly true in mathematics, where teachers may expect their work to be straightforward&mdash;universe and culture free ({{Cite|Martin|1997}}, {{Cite|Powell & Frankenstein|1997}}).
Origins, Explore MTBoS, TMC, presentations and promotional efforts
(p. 11)</blockquote>


== Use at Conferences ==
To support her claim, Gutiérrez first argues that all teaching is political. Teachers are under pressure both locally and nationally from factors like charter schools and big-money philanthropic efforts. Movements like the [[Common Core State Standards]] are little more than revisions to previous works, says Gutiérrez, like the National Research Council's ''[[Adding it Up]]'' and NCTM's ''[[Principles and Standards for School Mathematics]]'', except with the equity arguments removed. Teachers are also affected by the edTPA, a $300 credentialing assessment administered by Pearson &mdash; the same contractor that develops the PARCC assessment, one of two large-scale testing consortium that followed Common Core. Gutiérrez argues that these and other factors influence the educational system in important ways, and it is difficult for prospective teachers to make sense of it all on their own.
Twitter's real-time, chronological nature makes it ideal for following an ongoing event like an educational conference. [Say more, include reports/stats from prior conferences]


== Twitter Hashtags ==
Next, Gutiérrez argues that all mathematics teaching is political. Schools with successful track records with underserved students, such as the heavily researched Railside in Northern California ({{Cite|Boaler|2006}}; {{Cite|Boaler & Staples|2008}}; {{Cite|Horn|2004}}; {{Cite|Jilk|2010}}; {{Cite|Nasir, Cabana, Shreve, Woodbury, & Louie|2014}}) and Union in Chicago (Gutiérrez, [[Gutiérrez (1999)|1999]], [[Gutiérrez (2002)|2002]], [[Gutiérrez (2014)|2014]]) have struggled as political back-to-basics and teach-to-the-test movements took a toll on teachers who either succumbed to the pressures or left their schools. Gutiérrez argues that these political struggles are not just about teaching, and that "knowledge, power, and identity are interwoven with mathematics" itself (p. 17). Referring to this perspective as the "sociopolitical turn" ({{Cite|Gutiérrez|2010/2013}}; {{Cite|Stinson & Bullock|2015}}, the term particularly reflect issues where mathematical issues of identity and power become intertwined ({{Cite|Chronaki|1999}}; {{Cite|Valero & Zevenbergen|2004}}; {{Cite|Walkerdine|1988}}; {{Cite|Walshaw|2001}}. In school mathematics, says Gutiérrez, too often "who gets credit for doing and developing mathematics, who is capable in mathematics, and who is seen as part of the mathematical community is generally viewed as White" (p. 17). People treat math as if it is a pure extraction from nature and the universe, without values or agendas, instead of a human activity that is used to promote and perpetuate the values and agendas of the humans who use it.
Hashtags (named for the use of the #, or "hash" symbol) are commonly used on Twitter to make it easier for users to find messages related to a specific theme, content, or event. They were first suggested by [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Messina_(open_source_advocate) Chris Messina] in 2007 and inspired by the use of channels on [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Relay_Chat IRC networks]. As hashtag use evolved, Twitter adopted them into the service by making them links that trigger a Twitter search, making it easier to follow a hashtag that signifies an ongoing conversation without the need to follow all the users contributing to that conversation. Users often use hashtags informally to express some context or feeling about their tweet without trying to label that tweet as part of a larger, ongoing conversation. For example, math teachers may use the hashtag "[https://twitter.com/hashtag/nguyening?src=hash #nguyening]" as a form of the hashtag "#winning" but associated with the Twitter-using math teacher [[Fawn Nguyen]].


=== Chats Focused on Mathematics Education ===
Third, Gutiérrez argues that all mathematics teachers need political knowledge to be successful. It is not enough to have pedagogical content knowledge ({{Cite|Shulman|1986}}) or mathematical knowledge for teaching ({{Cite|Hill, Blunk, Charalambous, Lewis, Phelps, Sleep, & Ball|2008}}). It is also shortsighted to attribute student success to reform movements like "growth mindset" and "grit," both which situate the problems of learning in individuals and ignore systemic inequities.


{| class="wikitable sortable" width=100%
Gutiérrez argues that teachers need a "political knowledge for teaching," which she calls ''political conocimiento'' (Gutiérrez [[Gutiérrez (2012)|2012]], [[Gutiérrez (2013)|2013]]). In using ''conocimiento'', Gutiérrez takes the perspective that all knowledge is relational ({{Cite|Anzaldúa|1987}}) and that what makes knowledge important are the ways we relate our knowledge to others. Political conocimiento helps teachers understand how to navigate high-stakes testing systems, how to relate mathematics reforms to parents and the community, and how to "reinvent or reinterpret systems" (p. 20) to advocate for students. It is not knowledge ''of'' or ''for'' students and communities, but knowledge ''with'' students and communities that develops as teachers work alongside them. With this knowledge, teachers can engage in what Gutiérrez calls ''creative insubordination'' (Gutiérrez [[Gutiérrez (2013) PMENA|2013]], [[Gutiérrez (2015)|2015]], [[Gutiérrez (2015) PMENA|2015]]; {{Cite|Gutiérrez & Gregson|2013}}; {{Cite|Gutiérrez, Irving, & Gerardo|2013}}). Teachers who are creatively insubordinate are able to work in the best interests of students and protect themselves from harm while pushing back against unwanted reforms or unreasonable demands and requests from positions of authority.
! Hashtag || Purpose || Organizer(s) || Chat Time
|-
| [https://twitter.com/hashtag/mathchat #mathchat] || || ||
|-
| [https://twitter.com/hashtag/mathschat #mathschat] || Discussions of maths teaching in the United Kingdom. || || Wednesdays 8pm GMT
|-
| [https://twitter.com/hashtag/SlowMathChat #SlowMathChat] || A one-question-a-day chat to spur asynchronous, ongoing conversations. || [[Michael Fenton]] || Questions posted weekdays at 7am and 7pm ET
|-
| [https://twitter.com/hashtag/mathscpdchat #mathscpdchat] || United Kingdom-based discussions related to continuing professional development in maths education. See [https://twitter.com/mathscpdchat @mathscpdchat] for information. || [[National Center for Excellence in the Teaching of Mathematics]] || Tuesdays at 7pm GMT
|-
| [https://twitter.com/hashtag/mathsTLP #mathsTLP] || Collaborative "Twitter Lesson Planning" (TLP) for United Kingdom-based mathematics teachers. || [[Jo Morgan]] and ? || Sundays at 7pm GMT
|-
| [https://twitter.com/hashtag/ElemMathChat #ElemMathChat] || || ||
|-
| [https://twitter.com/hashtag/MSMathChat #MSMathChat] || || ||
|-
| [https://twitter.com/hashtag/probchat #probchat] || A chat focused on problem-based learning in mathematics. || ||
|-
| [https://twitter.com/hashtag/SpEdMath #SpEdMath] || A chat focused on mathematics teaching and learning for students with special needs. || [[Andrew Gael]] and ? || 2nd and 4th Thursday of the month at 9pm ET
|}


=== Other Chats of Interest to Mathematics Educators ===
Gutiérrez believes that prospective teachers can develop political knowledge. To do this, she suggests viewing things along four dimensions of equity/learning: a mainstream/dominant perspective along the dimensions of access and achievement, and a critical (as in critical of the status quo) perspective along the dimensions of power and identity (Gutiérrez [[Gutiérrez (2007)|2007]], [[Gutiérrez (2009)|2009]]. At the center, Gutiérrez places the concept of ''Nepantla'', "a kind of cosmological perspective ... that recognizes opposing forces and values and maintains those tensions rather than trying to shut them down" (p. 24; {{Cite|Anzaldúa|1987}}; {{Cite|Anazaldúa & Keating|2002}}). By examining messages about such things as achievement gaps, growth mindset, teacher quality, equal opportunities to learn, etc., prospective teachers can identify how conversations align with either a dominant or critical perspective ({{Cite|Gutiérrez|2006}}), and whose interests are served in doing so. Preservice teachers can align themselves with a more critical perspective in the classroom by using social justice curricular materials ({{Cite|Esmonde|2014}}; {{Cite|Gregson|2013}}; Gutstein [[Gutstein (2003)|2003]], [[Gutstein (2006)|2006]]; {{Cite|Turner & Strawhun|2005}}, by integrating the students' community into mathematics projects ({{Cite|Aguirre, Zavala, & Katanyoutant|2012}}; {{Cite|Turner, Gutierrez, & Diez-Palomar|2011}), or by changing the way they relate to mathematics and their students. These strategies and the development of political conocimiento can help teachers "play the game" of the dominant perspective while they simultaneously work to "change the game" and support students' identities and power.
* [https://twitter.com/search?q=%23edchat #edchat]
* [https://twitter.com/search?q=%23ukedchat #ukedchat] - A hashtag used in the United Kingdom for tweets that relate to education issues in the UK and to organize a weekly chat on Thursdays at 8pm GMT. See [https://twitter.com/ukedchat @ukedchat] for details.
* #Edtechchat
* #CCSSchat - Common Core State Standards Chat
* #educoach
* #iledchat
* #colchat


=== Conferences and Events ===
Gutiérrez's model for working with prospective teachers includes seminars, teacher partnerships, critical professional development, an after-school mathematics club, and mentoring ({{Cite|Gutiérrez (2015)|2015}}; {{{{Cite|Gutiérrez, Irving, & Gerardo|2013}}). Each activity supports four concepts: broadening and challenging knowledge, developing an advocacy stance, noticing multiple interpretations, and rehearsing for creative insubordination. Gutiérrez asks prospective teachers to examine why they wish to teach and to think about their own "ethical compass" (p. 26) rather than one directed by a corporate influence or the traditions of their profession. Gutiérrez also uses case studies and role-playing to develop empathy by putting prospective teachers into difficult situations and having them consider other perspectives. As prospective teachers develop in their political conocimiento, they interact with instructors and each other like professionals well-versed in their field, and not like novices trying to supply the correct answers.
* #NCTMBoston
* #ShadowCon
* #TMC15
* #PiDay


=== Other Uses ===
== Citation ==
* #educolor (educators of color)
* #Stem
* #mathsTLP 
* #tmwyk - Talking math with your kids <---Did I solve this one on my own?
* #wcydwt
* #INB
* #dok
* #SBG, #SBAR


== Affordances and Constraints ==
;APA
: Gutiérrez, R. (2018). Political conocimiento for teaching mathematics: Why teachers need it and how to develop it. In S. E. Kastberg, A. M. Tyminski, A. E. Lischka, & W. B. Sanchez (Eds.), ''Building support for scholarly practices in mathematics methods'' (pp. 11–37). Charlotte, NC: Information Age Publishing. Retrieved from http://www.infoagepub.com/products/Building-Support-for-Scholarly-Practices-in-Mathematics-Methods
;BibTeX
<pre>
@incollection{Gutierrez2018,
address = {Charlotte, NC},
author = {Guti{\'{e}}rrez, Rochelle},
booktitle = {Building support for scholarly practices in mathematics methods},
chapter = {2},
editor = {Kastberg, Signe E. and Tyminski, Andrew M. and Lischka, Alyson E. and Sanchez, Wendy B.},
isbn = {978-1-64113-025-7},
pages = {11--37},
publisher = {Information Age Publishing},
title = {{Political conocimiento for teaching mathematics: Why teachers need it and how to develop it}},
url = {http://www.infoagepub.com/products/Building-Support-for-Scholarly-Practices-in-Mathematics-Methods},
year = {2018}
}
</pre>
 
[[Category:Book Chapter]]
[[Category:2018]]

Revision as of 02:11, 29 October 2017

Political Conocimiento for Teaching Mathematics: Why Teachers Need It and How to Develop It

Outline of Headings

  • Politics of Teaching Mathematics
    • All Teaching is Political
    • All Mathematics Teaching is Political
    • All Mathematics Teachers Need Political Knowledge to Be Successful
  • Political Conocimiento for Teaching
    • Creative Insubordination
    • Teacher Education Programs Can Develop Political Knowledge
      • Conceptual Framework
      • The Mirror Test
      • In My Shoes
    • Teachers Learning Political Conocimiento
  • Conclusion

Summary

In this chapter, Rochelle Gutiérrez argues that teachers' knowledge of the politics of teaching is lacking compared to their knowledge of content and pedagogy. Because of this, teachers are more likely to carry on the practices and traditions of their schools and are less likely to challenge assumptions or advocate for the needs of students, particularly those who have been historically underserved. She begins the chapter:

Contrary to popular belief and research, addressing equity in mathematics education will not simply come once teachers understand the content they are to teach; when they find accessible, quality, or motivating activities and instructional strategies to use with students; or even when they develop meaningful relationships with students. Many teachers find their biggest struggle lies in understanding and negotiating the politics in their everyday practice. This is particularly true in mathematics, where teachers may expect their work to be straightforward—universe and culture free (Martin, 1997, Powell & Frankenstein, 1997). (p. 11)

To support her claim, Gutiérrez first argues that all teaching is political. Teachers are under pressure both locally and nationally from factors like charter schools and big-money philanthropic efforts. Movements like the Common Core State Standards are little more than revisions to previous works, says Gutiérrez, like the National Research Council's Adding it Up and NCTM's Principles and Standards for School Mathematics, except with the equity arguments removed. Teachers are also affected by the edTPA, a $300 credentialing assessment administered by Pearson — the same contractor that develops the PARCC assessment, one of two large-scale testing consortium that followed Common Core. Gutiérrez argues that these and other factors influence the educational system in important ways, and it is difficult for prospective teachers to make sense of it all on their own.

Next, Gutiérrez argues that all mathematics teaching is political. Schools with successful track records with underserved students, such as the heavily researched Railside in Northern California (Boaler, 2006; Boaler & Staples, 2008; Horn, 2004; Jilk, 2010; Nasir, Cabana, Shreve, Woodbury, & Louie, 2014) and Union in Chicago (Gutiérrez, 1999, 2002, 2014) have struggled as political back-to-basics and teach-to-the-test movements took a toll on teachers who either succumbed to the pressures or left their schools. Gutiérrez argues that these political struggles are not just about teaching, and that "knowledge, power, and identity are interwoven with mathematics" itself (p. 17). Referring to this perspective as the "sociopolitical turn" (Gutiérrez, 2010/2013; Stinson & Bullock, 2015, the term particularly reflect issues where mathematical issues of identity and power become intertwined (Chronaki, 1999; Valero & Zevenbergen, 2004; Walkerdine, 1988; Walshaw, 2001. In school mathematics, says Gutiérrez, too often "who gets credit for doing and developing mathematics, who is capable in mathematics, and who is seen as part of the mathematical community is generally viewed as White" (p. 17). People treat math as if it is a pure extraction from nature and the universe, without values or agendas, instead of a human activity that is used to promote and perpetuate the values and agendas of the humans who use it.

Third, Gutiérrez argues that all mathematics teachers need political knowledge to be successful. It is not enough to have pedagogical content knowledge (Shulman, 1986) or mathematical knowledge for teaching (Hill, Blunk, Charalambous, Lewis, Phelps, Sleep, & Ball, 2008). It is also shortsighted to attribute student success to reform movements like "growth mindset" and "grit," both which situate the problems of learning in individuals and ignore systemic inequities.

Gutiérrez argues that teachers need a "political knowledge for teaching," which she calls political conocimiento (Gutiérrez 2012, 2013). In using conocimiento, Gutiérrez takes the perspective that all knowledge is relational (Anzaldúa, 1987) and that what makes knowledge important are the ways we relate our knowledge to others. Political conocimiento helps teachers understand how to navigate high-stakes testing systems, how to relate mathematics reforms to parents and the community, and how to "reinvent or reinterpret systems" (p. 20) to advocate for students. It is not knowledge of or for students and communities, but knowledge with students and communities that develops as teachers work alongside them. With this knowledge, teachers can engage in what Gutiérrez calls creative insubordination (Gutiérrez 2013, 2015, 2015; Gutiérrez & Gregson, 2013; Gutiérrez, Irving, & Gerardo, 2013). Teachers who are creatively insubordinate are able to work in the best interests of students and protect themselves from harm while pushing back against unwanted reforms or unreasonable demands and requests from positions of authority.

Gutiérrez believes that prospective teachers can develop political knowledge. To do this, she suggests viewing things along four dimensions of equity/learning: a mainstream/dominant perspective along the dimensions of access and achievement, and a critical (as in critical of the status quo) perspective along the dimensions of power and identity (Gutiérrez 2007, 2009. At the center, Gutiérrez places the concept of Nepantla, "a kind of cosmological perspective ... that recognizes opposing forces and values and maintains those tensions rather than trying to shut them down" (p. 24; Anzaldúa, 1987; Anazaldúa & Keating, 2002). By examining messages about such things as achievement gaps, growth mindset, teacher quality, equal opportunities to learn, etc., prospective teachers can identify how conversations align with either a dominant or critical perspective (Gutiérrez, 2006), and whose interests are served in doing so. Preservice teachers can align themselves with a more critical perspective in the classroom by using social justice curricular materials (Esmonde, 2014; Gregson, 2013; Gutstein 2003, 2006; Turner & Strawhun, 2005, by integrating the students' community into mathematics projects (Aguirre, Zavala, & Katanyoutant, 2012; {{Cite|Turner, Gutierrez, & Diez-Palomar|2011}), or by changing the way they relate to mathematics and their students. These strategies and the development of political conocimiento can help teachers "play the game" of the dominant perspective while they simultaneously work to "change the game" and support students' identities and power.

Gutiérrez's model for working with prospective teachers includes seminars, teacher partnerships, critical professional development, an after-school mathematics club, and mentoring (Gutiérrez (2015), 2015; {{Gutiérrez, Irving, & Gerardo, 2013). Each activity supports four concepts: broadening and challenging knowledge, developing an advocacy stance, noticing multiple interpretations, and rehearsing for creative insubordination. Gutiérrez asks prospective teachers to examine why they wish to teach and to think about their own "ethical compass" (p. 26) rather than one directed by a corporate influence or the traditions of their profession. Gutiérrez also uses case studies and role-playing to develop empathy by putting prospective teachers into difficult situations and having them consider other perspectives. As prospective teachers develop in their political conocimiento, they interact with instructors and each other like professionals well-versed in their field, and not like novices trying to supply the correct answers.

Citation

APA
Gutiérrez, R. (2018). Political conocimiento for teaching mathematics: Why teachers need it and how to develop it. In S. E. Kastberg, A. M. Tyminski, A. E. Lischka, & W. B. Sanchez (Eds.), Building support for scholarly practices in mathematics methods (pp. 11–37). Charlotte, NC: Information Age Publishing. Retrieved from http://www.infoagepub.com/products/Building-Support-for-Scholarly-Practices-in-Mathematics-Methods
BibTeX
@incollection{Gutierrez2018,
address = {Charlotte, NC},
author = {Guti{\'{e}}rrez, Rochelle},
booktitle = {Building support for scholarly practices in mathematics methods},
chapter = {2},
editor = {Kastberg, Signe E. and Tyminski, Andrew M. and Lischka, Alyson E. and Sanchez, Wendy B.},
isbn = {978-1-64113-025-7},
pages = {11--37},
publisher = {Information Age Publishing},
title = {{Political conocimiento for teaching mathematics: Why teachers need it and how to develop it}},
url = {http://www.infoagepub.com/products/Building-Support-for-Scholarly-Practices-in-Mathematics-Methods},
year = {2018}
}