Abstract
In remote Aboriginal communities, there are many challenges that confront educators, not
the least of which is leadership that challenges the status quo and moves Aboriginal
communities forward in their access to, and engagement with, the mathematics school
curriculum. This paper draws on data from the Maths in the Kimberley (MiTK) project
where the complexities around reforming mathematics were investigated through leadership
models. It was considered that the complexities faced by principals in their day-to-day
management of schools closed down their capacity for curriculum leadership. A new model
of curriculum leadership, based on the Accelerated Literacy model was adopted for
numeracy reform. This model, its genesis and its implementation is discussed along with
the mitigating context that shapes the need for models of leadership that focus on
curriculum reform for remote Indigenous contexts. The implications of this model are
discussed in conjunction with the field of mathematics educational research.
Robyn Jorgensen (Zevenbergen) & Richard Niesche
Dispersing Mathematics Curriculum Leadership in Remote Aboriginal Communities