“How You Like Me Now?”: Exploring Teacher Perceptions of Urban Middle Schoolers’ Mathematical Abilities and Identities

HEAT, an instructional program emphasizing a nontraditional hands-on approach to algebraic instruction for urban, predominantly African American middle schoolers, provides a space to explore teachers’ beliefs about urban students’ mathematical abilities and motivation and addresses how teacher perce...

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Veröffentlicht in:Education and urban society 2019-11, Vol.51 (8), p.1029-1050
Hauptverfasser: Flint, Tori K., Sheppard, Peter, Tackie, Nii A.
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container_issue 8
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container_title Education and urban society
container_volume 51
creator Flint, Tori K.
Sheppard, Peter
Tackie, Nii A.
description HEAT, an instructional program emphasizing a nontraditional hands-on approach to algebraic instruction for urban, predominantly African American middle schoolers, provides a space to explore teachers’ beliefs about urban students’ mathematical abilities and motivation and addresses how teacher perceptions can intersect with instruction, learning, and the construction of students’ mathematical identities. Using a multiple case study design, we analyzed six urban middle school mathematics teachers’ written reflections and interview responses. Findings suggest that teachers’ instructional behaviors, along with their perceptions and expectations of urban, African American middle schoolers’ mathematical abilities and motivation, interact with students’ beliefs and work habits in ways that can promote and support students’ positive mathematical identity construction. Thus, HEAT personified thriving learning subcultures and supportive mathematical communities of practice that are far too atypical in urban middle schools.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0013124518785017
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); ERIC - Full Text Only (Discovery); SAGE Complete; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Ability
African American Students
African Americans
Algebra
Attitude Change
Case studies
Cooperative Learning
Experiential Learning
Federal Programs
Habits
Identity
Learning
Manipulative Materials
Mathematics
Mathematics Skills
Middle School Students
Middle School Teachers
Middle schools
Motivation
Perceptions
Program Effectiveness
Student Motivation
Student teacher relationship
Students
Subcultures
Teacher Attitudes
Teacher Expectations of Students
Teachers
Teaching
Urban areas
Urban Schools
title “How You Like Me Now?”: Exploring Teacher Perceptions of Urban Middle Schoolers’ Mathematical Abilities and Identities
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