Two key stakeholders in enhancing and building Aboriginal children’s capacity to learn mathematics are teachers and the Aboriginal children themselves. In Australian schools it is often the case that the two groups come from different cultural backgrounds with very differing life experiences. This paper reports on an ethnographic study and focuses on the beliefs of Aboriginal children and their teachers about learning mathematics. It suggests significant issues that teachers need to acknowledge in providing appropriate learning environments for Aboriginal children
This chapter examines how a change in school leadership can successfully address competencies in com...
Chris and Leesa are two Indigenous people who have come to mathematics education through their invol...
This thesis explored how six teachers of mathematics embedded Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander ...
Two key stakeholders in enhancing and building Aboriginal children’s capacity to learn mathematics a...
This paper explores pedagogies that support Indigenous students learning of mathematics. Three schoo...
This paper explores pedagogies that support Indigenous students learning of mathematics. Three schoo...
Young children are capable of engaging with challenging mathematical concepts at an early age. A str...
Chris and Leesa are two Indigenous people who have come to mathematics education through their invol...
This paper focuses on the social justice imperative to bring about improved mathematical learning ou...
The most critical factor in the provision of quality learning is the teacher (Hayes, Mills, Christie...
This paper reports the views of 19 Indigenous early childhood practitioners from regional and rural ...
In 2004, a young, non-Indigenous, second-year teacher in a remote Queensland Indigenous community de...
Australian Indigenous students' mathematics performance continues to be below that of non-Indigenous...
In hundreds of classrooms across Australia mathematics is taught to a heterogeneous mix of children ...
Indigenous education remains of grave concern within Australian society (Fitzgerald, 2002). Systems ...
This chapter examines how a change in school leadership can successfully address competencies in com...
Chris and Leesa are two Indigenous people who have come to mathematics education through their invol...
This thesis explored how six teachers of mathematics embedded Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander ...
Two key stakeholders in enhancing and building Aboriginal children’s capacity to learn mathematics a...
This paper explores pedagogies that support Indigenous students learning of mathematics. Three schoo...
This paper explores pedagogies that support Indigenous students learning of mathematics. Three schoo...
Young children are capable of engaging with challenging mathematical concepts at an early age. A str...
Chris and Leesa are two Indigenous people who have come to mathematics education through their invol...
This paper focuses on the social justice imperative to bring about improved mathematical learning ou...
The most critical factor in the provision of quality learning is the teacher (Hayes, Mills, Christie...
This paper reports the views of 19 Indigenous early childhood practitioners from regional and rural ...
In 2004, a young, non-Indigenous, second-year teacher in a remote Queensland Indigenous community de...
Australian Indigenous students' mathematics performance continues to be below that of non-Indigenous...
In hundreds of classrooms across Australia mathematics is taught to a heterogeneous mix of children ...
Indigenous education remains of grave concern within Australian society (Fitzgerald, 2002). Systems ...
This chapter examines how a change in school leadership can successfully address competencies in com...
Chris and Leesa are two Indigenous people who have come to mathematics education through their invol...
This thesis explored how six teachers of mathematics embedded Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander ...