This book documents, strings together and juxtaposes research that uses ethnographical classroom data to explain, on the one hand, how socio-political issues play out in the mathematics class. On the other hand, it illuminates how class, race etc. affect the micro-sociology of the mathematics classroom. The volume advances the knowledge in the field by providing an empirical grounding of socio-political research on mathematics education, and it extends the frame in which mathematical classroom cultures are conceived.
Christine Knipping is Professor of Mathematics Education at the Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science at the University of Bremen. Her research interests include argumentation and proving, discursive and interactional mechanisms in mathematics classrooms, sociological perspectives on stratification in school and international comparisons.
Hauke Straehler-Pohl is a post-doctoral researcher in Sociology of Education and Mathematics Education in the Faculty of Education and Psychology at the Freie Universität, Berlin. His research interests include social inequalities in the school system, sociology of (pedagogic) evaluation, documentary method, performative approaches to school mathematics, and mathematics teacher education.