Abstract
Flipped learning is gaining in popularity as a teaching approach in secondary mathematics
classrooms. Traditionally seen as the domain of tertiary teaching, flipped learning has a
number of affordances that address the challenging demands of teaching secondary
mathematics. Enacting this approach requires a reconceptualization of traditional secondary
mathematics instruction in that instructional content is assigned as homework before class,
providing for more targeted in-class teaching. I describe three different enactments of the
flipped learning approach and report on the teachers’ and students’ experiences of such an
approach and the affordances it offers.