Abstract
In the first paper, Wood and her colleagues outline the history and background of ways that the Queensland Department of Education (the Department) have sought to support teachers to develop their mathematics pedagogy through a range of strategic partnerships across two decades. In Building system-wide mathematics pedagogy through collaborative partnerships, the authors discuss the impetus behind building teachers’ pedagogical expertise in guided mathematical inquiry by working with mathematics education researchers as critical friends and developing resources at scale. In the second paper, Designing curriculum resources to support teacher learning, Goos details her theoretical analysis of the design of resources supporting teachers to “learn how to learn” to teach content that was new to them in the Queensland senior secondary mathematics syllabuses. Her paper exemplifies the Department’s initiative to create a suite of professional learning materials for teachers designed by mathematics education researchers in a range of topics in mathematics curriculum, pedagogy, and classroom strategies. In the next paper, Building capability: What to do when you don’t know what to do, school practitioners Moran and Lambie discuss how their school worked with a mathematics education researcher as a critical friend to address a problem of practice: improving students’ performance on a new state assessment using complex, open-ended problems. They provide school-based evidence of how the using a research-based framework supported students to build confidence in addressing these tasks. Finally, in Building capability for teachers of mathematics, Horne and Hillman outline the partnership between the Department and an experienced teacher to develop resources that build teachers’ capabilities in teaching mathematics. The ‘How to Teach Mathematics Toolkit’ seeks in particular to support beginning teachers and those teaching mathematics out-of-field in an online resource.