Abstract
Research indicates that appropriate mathematics teaching is connected to an understanding of
and art interactive relationship with the cultural environment in which it takes place. The
cultural environment of Australia's mathematics classrooms has changed dramatically in the
last fifty years due largely to an influx of migrant students of diverse origins. This paper
investigates the changing patterns of migration over this period and their links with
mathematics classroom environments through documentation of the perceptions of a group of
Victorian mathematics teachers. Also investigated were perceptions of any responses through
the provision of migrant related resources by mathematics educators and of their own roles in
generating responses to the migrant presence in their classrooms.