Math was always my favorite subject throughout my K-12 schooling. It has always been the one subject that has come naturally to me. All throughout grade school, I was always among the top achievers in math, never earning a grade lower than a B. I prided myself on my ability to solve complicated computational problems, memorize algorithms, and be the go-to person for providing math tutoring to my classmates. I was so confident that I would still ace my math tests without a single minute of preparation.
As a mathematics major at Temple University, I was either the only Black person or one of the only Black students in practically every math course I took. I can vividly recall those moments when I was struggling to stay afloat in those courses and I’d reached out to some of my white classmates for tutoring, only for them to decline. After a few unsuccessful attempts, I just stopped trying and shifted my focus to befriending any Black students I could find in my math courses.
At the time, there were very few Black mathematics majors walking around on campus so whenever I enrolled in a math course that had at least one other Black student, it made all the difference in the world! I felt more secure and safe, knowing that there was another Black student in the room who could empathize and relate to the imposter syndrome I was experiencing around my math ability. Even with that support, my confidence as a math learner gradually decreased as I progressed through my undergraduate years and the math courses became more challenging. After graduating with a 2.3 cumulative GPA in my math courses, I made up my mind that I didn’t have the chops to pursue math at the master's or doctorate level. In my mind, I thought:
Now don’t get wrong … I still think I’ve done pretty well for myself, but a part of me still wonders “What if …”
It is those same “What ifs” that motivate me, as a secondary level math teacher, to push my students, especially my Black students, to reframe the stories they tell themselves about their perceived abilities as math learners. The most recent news about the Florida Department of Education rejecting more than 50 math textbooks from next school year’s curriculum due to alleged textbook references to critical race theory (CRT) is just one of many examples of how math education has served as a vehicle for oppressing and marginalizing Black and brown students for many generations.
Furthermore, the political pushback against the alleged “indoctrination” of CRT and the push for ethnic studies in math classrooms exists with the intention of maintaining a racial hierarchy of mathematical ability where white and Asian students are positioned at the top while Black, Indigenous, and Latinx students are placed at the bottom. These implicit messages around mathematical ability strongly influence the relationships that so many students of color have with math at the K-12 level.
So here’s the deal.
I have spent my entire teaching career teaching in urban schools with predominantly Black student populations. The only indoctrinating I’ve been doing during that time has been getting my Black and brown students to believe that they are just as capable of becoming strong math learners as their white peers.
To be more specific, I indoctrinate my students by:
At the start of this year, I launched my newest podcast, Radical Math Talk, in an effort to highlight educators who are reshaping, redefining, and decolonizing the way that math education is taught in our schools. Understanding that math is a space where women and people of color have been effectively marginalized, I’ve intentionally interviewed women of color as guests for the first few episodes. Below are the stories of a few of these phenomenal women:
There are so many other folx I could mention above, but the main point is that math people are everywhere! And for the record, they all don’t wear nerdy glasses, wrinkled shirts, and highwater pants. They all don’t hold advanced degrees in mathematics or dedicate their entire lives to proving centuries-old theorems and conjectures. And most importantly, they’re not all white! If we, as math educators, can commit to centering our pedagogy to humanize our students, we can push our students to reimagine the role that math plays in their lives. All of our students can be “math people.”
Click below to take the pledge!