Pamela PergerEveryone has beliefs about how learning should take place and what the best practices are to enable this to happen. Although it is believed that students’ beliefs about ‘best practice’ will mirror those of their teachers, and change as they change teachers (Kershner & Pointon, 2000; Kloosterman, Raymond, & Emenaker, 1996) the importance of listening to the ‘students voice’ is becoming recognised (McCullum, Hargreaves & Gipp, 2000). This paper reports on one aspect of a larger study that explored Pasifika student achievement in mathematics at Year 7. What is it that these students consider ‘best practice’ in learning mathematics? Do their beliefs truly mirror those of their teacher?