Abstract
This paper explores how beliefs about mathematics may influence low-achieving adults’ re-engagement with mathematics in the tertiary sector. Adult learners who have problematic mathematical histories often hold negative beliefs about the nature of mathematics and how it is learned. In New Zealand these adults are often required to re-engage in mathematical provision in the tertiary sector to gain qualifications for employment. The beliefs they hold about mathematics may negatively influence their approach to learning mathematics and their affective response to it. This paper explores several ways in which negative beliefs about mathematics may undermine adults’ success.