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Middle School Mathematics Lessons to Explore, Understand, and Respond to Social Injustice [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 392 pages, height x width: 279x215 mm, weight: 1130 g
  • Sērija : Corwin Mathematics Series
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Sep-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Corwin Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1071845527
  • ISBN-13: 9781071845523
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  • Cena: 41,70 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 392 pages, height x width: 279x215 mm, weight: 1130 g
  • Sērija : Corwin Mathematics Series
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Sep-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Corwin Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1071845527
  • ISBN-13: 9781071845523
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
"If you teach middle school math and have wanted to promote social justice, but havent been sure how to get started, you need to check out this book. It incorporates lessons you can use immediately as well as how to foster the kind of classroom community where students will thrive. Its the kind of book youll want to have alongside you to support you throughout your journey."

Robert Kaplinsky Author and Consultant Long Beach, CA

Empower young adolescents to be the changejoin the teaching mathematics for social justice movement!

Students of all ages and intersecting identitiesthrough media and their lived experiences bear witness to and experience social injustices and movements around the world for greater justice. However, when people think of social justice, mathematics rarely comes to mind. With a user-friendly design, this book brings middle school mathematics content to life by connecting it to issues students see or experience.

Developed for use by Grades 6-8 educators, the contributed model lessons in this book walk teachers through the process of applying critical frameworks to instruction, using standards-based mathematics to explore, understand, and respond to social injustices. Learn to plan daily instruction that engages young adolescents in mathematics explorations through age-appropriate, culturally relevant topics such as health and economic inequality, human and civil rights, environmental justice, and accessibility. Features include:





Content cross-referenced by mathematical concept and social issues Connection to Learning for Justices social justice standards Downloadable teacher materials and lesson resources Guidance for lessons driven by young adolescents unique passions and challenges Connections between research and practice

Written for teachers committed to developing equitable and empowering practices through the lens of mathematics content and practice standards as well as social justice standards, this book will help connect content to young adolescents daily lives, strengthen their mathematical understanding, and expose them to issues that will support them in becoming active agents of change and responsible leaders.

Recenzijas

A wonderful collection of lessons, submitted by teachers, to help students of all ages see topics they care about, and use mathematics as a tool for progress in the world. -- Jo Boaler * Stanford, CA * Conway et al. have done it again! In this volume, not only do the authors share rich, standards- based, grade-level appropriate mathematical tasks with social justice contexts, they also share specific strategies and tools to engage the middle school mathematics student. -- Kyndall Brown * Los Angeles, CA * Middle School Mathematics Lessons to Explore, Understand, and Respond to Social Injustice is a must-have resource for any middle school educator seeking to incorporate teaching mathematics for social justice in their educational environment. This book provides practical lessons that will truly enhance a childs educational experience through engaging them in relevant applications of mathematics. -- Kristopher J. Childs * Winter Garden, FL * If you teach middle school mathematics and have wanted to promote social justice but havent been sure how to get started, you need to check out this book. It incorporates lessons you can use immediately as well as how to foster the kind of classroom community where students will thrive. Its the kind of book youll want to have alongside you to support you throughout your journey. -- Robert Kaplinsky * Long Beach, CA * Middle School Mathematics Lessons to Explore, Understand, and Respond to Social Injustice is an outstanding addition to the growing number of texts and projects that weave the teaching of mathematics and social justice together. The authors go deep and broad to show how, why, and when this combination of curricular topics improves our students mathematical understandings while honing their abilities and dispositions to promote social and environmental justice in their own lives and communities. -- Bob Peterson * Milwaukee, WI * A very compelling set of fresh ideas are offered that prepare educators to turn the corner on advocating for social justice in the mathematics classroom. Each book is full of engaging activities, frameworks, and standards that center instruction on community, worldview, and the developmental needs of all studentsa much-needed resource to reboot our commitment to the next generation. -- Linda M. Fulmore * Cave Creek, AZ * I imagine many people will purchase this book for the sample lesson plans. And you should; theyre fabulous. But just as fabulous, and equally important, is the framework the authors lay out for a comprehensive, holistic, transformative approach to mathematics teaching, with social justice at its core. -- Paul C. Gorski * Columbia, SC * As a teacher educator for social justice, I am familiar with the near-constant refrain of "this isnt something you can do in math!" This book illustrates just the opposite. Indeed, not only is it possible to engage in social justice mathematics, but it is an educational imperative to do so. This much-needed and valuable collection provides practitioners with clear and compelling lessons that are grounded in theories of justice and equity. Especially timely in this text is the clear evidence that not only can middle school young adolescents engage in critical conversations, problem solving, and sociocultural analysis in their mathematics classes, but they must. The editors and contributors to this volume have curated a powerful resource that is a must-read for all mathematics educators and those who care about social justice teaching and learning. -- Alyssa Hadley Dunn * East Lansing, MI * Middle School Mathematics Lessons to Explore, Understand, and Respond to Social Injustice is a book written for the teacher of mathematics. This diverse group of authors and educators provides everything a teacher needs to transform their practice from critical theory to teachable lesson plans! A must-read for educators who seek to transform mathematics back to its humanistic roots. -- Shraddha Shirude * Seattle, WA *

Foreword xiv
Julia M. Aguirre
Acknowledgments xvi
About the Authors xix
Introduction 1(18)
Why Is Teaching Mathematics for Social Justice Critical?
2(1)
This Book's Authorship
3(5)
The Lesson Authors
8(7)
Who Is This Book for?
15(1)
The Book's Organization
16(3)
Part I Teaching Mathematics for Social Justice
19(72)
Chapter 1 What Is Social Justice and Why Does It Matter in Teaching Mathematics?
20(14)
What Does Social Justice Mean to You?
22(2)
What Is Teaching Mathematics for Social Justice?
24(5)
Why Social Justice in Mathematics Education?
29(2)
Conclusion
31(2)
Reflection and Action
33(1)
Chapter 2 Building and Sustaining a Beloved Community in the Middle School Mathematics Classroom
34(28)
Foundations for Belonging in Middle School Mathematics
35(1)
Building a "Beloved Community" in the Middle School Mathematics Classroom
36(10)
Reflection and Action
46(1)
Chapter 3: Fostering a Classroom to Teach Mathematics for Social Justice
47(2)
Content Matters
49(2)
Context Matters
51(3)
When Matters
54(2)
How Matters
56(1)
Responding to Pushback or Backlash
57(3)
Conclusion
60(1)
Reflection and Action
61(1)
Chapter 4 Instructional Tools for the Social Justice Mathematics Lesson
62(15)
Establishing Goals
62(3)
Teaching Equitably
65(1)
Managing Discourse
66(5)
Assessing Purposefully
71(5)
Conclusion
76(1)
Reflection and Action
76(1)
Chapter 5 Teaching the Social Justice Mathematics Lesson
77(14)
Social Justice Mathematics Framework
77(5)
Planning to Implement a SJML
82(5)
Last Words Before You Go Teach
87(2)
Conclusion
89(1)
Reflection and Action
89(2)
Part II Social Justice Mathematics Lessons
91(204)
Chapter 6 The Number System
92(32)
6.1 Food Apartheid: Graphing and Understanding Access to Healthy Food by Becky Evans, Emmalee Bielenberg, Julia Novosad, and Cassie Ruettiger
93(6)
6.2 Cor(o)ner Stores and Food Apartheid by Michelle Cody and Kari Kokka
99(10)
6.3 Billionaire Power by Natalie Odom Pough and Y. Rhoda Latimer
109(6)
6.4 Middle School Mathematics to Explore People Represented in Our World and Community by Mary Candace Raygoza, Eva Thanheiser, Courtney Koestler, Jeff Craig, and Lynette Guzman
115(9)
Chapter 7 Ratios and Proportional Relationships
124(60)
7.1 Hey Google, Who's a Mathematician?
126(8)
Allyson Lam
7.2 The True Cost of That $29 T-Shirt in the Store Window by Bethany Chan, Debasmita Basu, Rebecca Ellis, Frances K. Harper, and Jennifer Ruef
134(7)
7.3 Majority and Power by Jennifer A. Wolfe and Farshid Safi
141(11)
7.4 Smoking and Vaping: Targeting of Marginalized Communities by the Tobacco Industry by Nichole Campbell and Peggy Nayar
152(7)
7.5 Health, Race, and Ratios by Travis Weiland and Melissa A. Gallagher
159(14)
7.6 Health Inequalities: COVID-19 and Other Health Conditions by Tashana Howse and Kendrick Savage
173(11)
Chapter 8 Algebra: Expressions, Equations, and Functions
184(22)
8.1 Gerrymandering of Voting Districts by Chuck Munter and Cara Haines
185(8)
8.2 National Team Pay Investigation by Andrew Reardon
193(5)
8.3 The Black Vote in America: Impact of the 1965 Voting Rights Act by Chuck Munter and Cara Haines
198(8)
Chapter 9 Statistics and Probability
206(36)
9.1 Playing With Data by Odesma Dalrymple, Marissa Forbes, Celina Gonzalez, Kristin Komatsubara, Perla Lahana Myers, and JoiSpencer
208(12)
9.2 The Mathematics of Toxic Air Emissions by Queshonda Kudaisi and Oluwaseun Kudaisi
220(4)
9.3 Gender Pay Gap by Liza (Cope) Bondurant, Lee Inmon Dean, and Rebecca Hudson
224(8)
9.4 How Many Meals Can Minimum Wage Buy?
232(10)
Elizabeth O. Ayisi
Colleen Carman
Chapter 10 Geometry
242(53)
10.1 Map Projections by Lisa Skultety, Candace Joswick, Melissa Troudt, and Robin Keturah Anderson
244(10)
10.2 3D Modeling for Water by Mathew D. Felton-Koestler and Courtney Koestler
254(9)
10.3 Water Is Life---Our Collective Past, Present, and Future by Sara Rezvi and Tyrone Martinez-Black
263(13)
10.4 Accessible Playground by Maggie Lee McHugh and Jennifer Kosiak
276(9)
10.5 Investigating Areas to Determine Fairness by Jennifer Dao
285(10)
Part III Next Steps
295(32)
Chapter 11 Advice From the Field
296(12)
Successes Implementing SJMLs
297(3)
Plan for and Respond to Challenges
300(1)
Additional Advice to Colleagues Implementing SJMLs
301(2)
Support Yourself to Sustain and Persist
303(1)
Conclusion
304(4)
Chapter 12 Creating Social Justice Mathematics Lessons for Your Own Classroom
308(19)
Setting a Framework for an Effective SJML
308(11)
Getting Started
319(6)
Final Words
325(2)
Appendix A Additional Resources 327(4)
Appendix B Lesson Resources 331(7)
Appendix C Essential Middle Grades Concepts 338(2)
Appendix D Social Justice Topics, Standards, and Grade Level Outcomes 340(2)
Appendix E Lessons by Essential Middle Grades Concepts, Social Justice Grades 6--8 Outcomes, and Social Justice Topics 342(6)
Appendix F Social Justice Mathematics Lesson Planner 348(2)
References 350(6)
Index 356
Basil Conway IV is an associate professor of mathematics education in the College of Education and Health Professions at Columbus State University and serves as the mathematics education graduate programs director. He serves on numerous doctoral committees as both a chair and methodologist. He earned his BS, MS, and PhD. in mathematics education from Auburn University in 2005, 2012, and 2015, respectively. He also completed his MS in statistical science at Colorado State University in 2010.



 Basil previously spent 10 years teaching in public middle and high schools before he became a teacher educator. During this time, he also worked as an instructor at a local junior college. Over the past 17 years of service in teaching mathematics and future teachers of mathematics, he has served in various local mathematics education leadership positions and organizations including Transforming East Alabama Mathematics (TEAM-Math), Auburn Universitys Teacher Leader Academy, East Alabama Council for Teachers of Mathematics, Woodrow Wilson Fellow, National Mathematics and Science Initiative, and A+ College Ready. He has published works related to teaching mathematics for social justice in numerous books and journals and has a special interest in statistics education.

 Basils lens for teaching and student learning draws heavily from Vygotskys theory of social constructivism in which language and culture play essential roles in human intellectual development. Thus, he believes the co-construction of knowledge is paramount in the development of students social, religious, and mathematical identities. He believes teachers, parents, other students, cultural norms, and other cultural communicative devices play a critical role in shaping students knowledge of themselves, faith, and mathematics.

Lateefah Id-Deen is an assistant professor for mathematics education in the Bagwell College of Education at Kennesaw State University. She earned her bachelors degree from the University of Arkansas Pine Bluff, a masters degree from Iowa State University, and a doctorate in curriculum, instruction, and teacher education from Michigan State University, with foci in mathematics education and urban education.

She has written several articles and book chapters that examine historically marginalized students perspectives on their experiences in mathematics classrooms and ways to support educators in hearing and developing practice in relation to students expressed interests. She investigates social justice pedagogies and culturally responsive instructional practices that promote studentteacher relationships, affirm mathematics identities, and cultivate belongingness to support students learning experiences in mathematics classrooms. She has engaged in projects that support Black girls schooling experiences. She also works with curriculum developers, schools, and districts that want to incorporate culturally relevant and anti-racist mathematics instructional strategies in mathematics classrooms. Her work reflects her passion for creating equitable learning environments for historically marginalized students in mathematics classrooms. Connect with her on Twitter @Prof_IdDeenL.

Mary Candace Raygoza (she/her/hers) is a STEMinist (STEM and feminist!) teacher educator. She is an associate professor of teacher education at Saint Marys College of California and teaches courses including Humanizing Education Methods, Teaching for Social Justice, and Praxis Seminar. She is the lead investigator on a National Science Foundation grant to design the STEM Teachers for Justice, Community, and Leadership teaching pathway at Saint Marys. Mary earned a bachelors degree in sociology with an education minor at University of California, Berkeley and a full mathematics teaching credential and MEd, followed by a PhD in urban schooling, at University of California, Los Angeles. Her scholarship explores teaching mathematics for social justice and critical, justice-oriented, anti-racist teacher education.

Mary is a former high school mathematics teacher in East Los Angeles, where she taught algebra and geometry, with a commitment to teaching about the social and political world through mathematics and supporting students to develop as researchers and change agents through youth participatory action research. Mary believes in fostering teachers to develop as transformative leaders who will create a more just world in solidarity with youth and communities.

Amanda Ruiz was born in Long Beach and raised in Huntington Beach, California. She left Southern California for the Bay Area to attend University of California, Berkeley, where she created her own major focused on social movements. After some experience working in secondary education and a realization that mathematics is a social justice issue, Amanda went back to school to pursue a degree in mathematics. She received a masters degree in mathematics from San Francisco State University and then her PhD in mathematics from Binghamton University in 2013. After a year as a teaching and research postdoctoral fellow in the Mathematics Department at Harvey Mudd College, Amanda joined the University of San Diego where she is now an associate professor of mathematics.

Amandas PhD thesis was on realization spaces of phased matroids. While her prior research is predominantly in combinatorics and matroid theory, her research has more recently expanded to include pedagogical work. She is particularly interested in using mathematics to study issues of social justice and investigating pedagogies that make mathematical spaces more inclusive, where those traditionally underrepresented in mathematics can thrive.

John W. Staley, Ph.D., has been involved in mathematics education for over 35 years as a secondary mathematics teacher, adjunct professor, district and national leader, and consultant. During his career he has presented at state, national, and international conferences; served on many committees and task forces; facilitated workshops and professional development sessions on a variety of topics; and received the Presidential Award for Excellence in Teaching Mathematics and Science. A past president for NCSM, the mathematics education leadership organization, and past chair of the U.S. National Commission on Mathematics Instruction, he continues to serve on several advisory boards and is a co-founder of Math Milestones. He is a coauthor for Middle School (2023) and High School (2022) Mathematics Lessons to Explore, Understand, and Respond to Social Injustice (Corwin/NCTM), Catalyzing Change in High School Mathematics: Initiating Critical Conversations (NCTM), and Framework for Leadership in Mathematics Education (NCSM). Johns current passion and work focuses on projects that involve changing the narrative about who is seen as being doers, learners, and teachers of mathematics, especially for African American boys and men; student readiness for Algebra and success during the transition years; and building mathematics education leaders at all levels.  Follow at X @jstaley06 to learn more about his work.

 



Eva Thanheiser is a mathematics teacher educator. She is a professor of mathematics education at Portland State University in Portland, Oregon. Eva teaches mathematics content courses for elementary and middle school teachers. She contextualizes much of the mathematics content in social and political contexts.

She is the lead investigator on two National Science Foundation grants, one to connect elementary mathematics to the world and another focused on anti-bias mathematics education at the K12 level. Eva started her studies in Germany and finished a masters in mathematics in 1998 at Kansas University and a PhD in mathematics education in 2005 at the joint doctoral program between the University of California San Diego and San Diego State University. Evas scholarship explores teaching mathematics for social justice and anti-bias mathematics education.

Eva has received the Early Career Award from the Association of Mathematics Teacher Educators (AMTE) as well as the Sigma Xi Outstanding Researcher Award. She has served in leadership roles at AMTE and the Psychology of Mathematics Education North America as well as on editorial boards of the Mathematics Teacher Educator and the Journal of Research in Mathematics Education.