Abstract
The central beliefs of mathematics teachers play a crucial role in shaping their teaching practices and determining how their students learn mathematics. This study presents the relative importance of various beliefs held by mathematics teachers. The study surveyed over 300 high school mathematics teachers in Pakistan (using a Likert scale of 1 to 5), exploring which beliefs are most important and how central beliefs impact their teaching. The results show that beliefs about exploring problems to discover patterns, textbooks, memorization and mathematical signs, notations, and symbols have many connections and correlations with other beliefs. These beliefs may potentially serve as the central beliefs in the teachers' belief system.