ABSTRACT

Every year, significant numbers of immigrant children from Mexico enter classrooms in the United States. These immigrants comprise a heterogeneous group of students with diverse needs, abilities, and experiences. Transnational and Borderland Studies in Mathematics Education is the first collection to offer research studies across these communities. Providing invaluable research on both sending and receiving communities in Mexico and the US, this collection considers the multiple aspects of children’s experiences with mathematics, including curriculum, classroom participation structures, mathematical reasoning and discourse – both in and out of school – and parents’ perceptions and beliefs about mathematics instruction.  An important treatment of an insufficiently documented subject, this collection brings together researchers on both sides of the border to foster and support an interest in documenting evidence that will set the stage for future studies in mathematics education.

chapter |22 pages

Ecological Approaches to Transnational Research on Mathematical Reasoning

A Focus on Latino/a Mathematics Learners in the Borderlands

chapter |23 pages

Crossing the Border Between Home and School

Dominican Parents' Perspectives on the Teaching and Learning of Mathematics

chapter |26 pages

Becoming a “Liberal” Math Learner

Expanding Secondary School Mathematics to Support Cultural Connections, Multiple Mathematical Identities, and Engagement

chapter |25 pages

Teachers' Conceptions of Mathematics and Mathematics Teaching and Learning

The Case of Two Elementary Teachers in Northern Mexico

chapter |4 pages

Looking Forward

Establishing a Research Agenda for Transnational and Borderland Studies in Mathematics Education

chapter |8 pages

Epilogue

Olimpia Figueras