Abstract
In this paper I argue that humanist understandings of learners can underscore mediocrity in mathematics learning in the early years. Although many children come to school ready and eager to learn mathematics, it can happen that their classroom experiences alienate and disenfranchise them. This sometimes occurs when teachers, deferring to humanist understandings of learners as naturally capable and competent and learning as experiential, teach little mathematics but concentrate on fashioning the learning environment to supposedly make it non-threatening, ‘enjoyable’ and ‘relevant’. In contrast I use the poststructuralist notions of positioning and subjectification to suggest that learners can not be positively positioned in the discourse of mathematics education if they are not given the opportunity to construct robust mathematics and generative and idiosyncratic ways of thinking and reasoning in mathematics.