Abstract
Australia?s Teachers: Australia?s Future (DEST, 2003) highlights the increasing demands on the education system to train, inspire and retain outstanding teachers of mathematics. Such teachers, it is stated adopt ?innovative approaches? to teaching while developing in students ?the capacity to be innovative? (p. 6). However, the document itself is far from innovative in its views of how this ideal is likely to be realised. In this paper I adopt a poststructuralist view that the prospective teacher?s capacity to act in innovative ways, though based on knowledge, skills and attitude, is (im)mobilised through how s/he is, and has been, positioned in teaching/learning interactions and relationships in teacher education and schools. Discursive relationships shape professional and mathematical identities and abilities though they are not mentioned in the DEST (2003) document.