Abstract
In this paper I will seek to argue that teachers have been constituted through practices and
discourses of teacher education programs so as to perceive and construct their world through
psychologistic frameworks. Part of becoming a legitimate practitioner within mathematics
education! is the embodiment of these discourses as recognised through the credentialling
processes of teacher education programs. In such programs there is a focus on pedagogical
processes whereby the learning of mathematics is seen as the internalising of knowledge and .
concepts. These programs are dominant within the broad field of education, so that many, if
not all, of the teachers emerging from teacher education institutions enter the school context
holding sets of beliefs and attitudes about the nature of teaching and learning which support
liberal views of schooling. As such, there is a strong propensity for teachers to explain their
students' successes and failures in mathematics education within psychological terms of
references where references are made to concepts such as ability or intelligence; levels of
development or cognition; motivation; self esteem; and (positive) reinforcement. The focus is
on a individualised subject devoid of the social and political context within which meaning
making is occurring. By undertaking a critique of these discourses it is possible to understand
the subtle ways in such discourses provide the frameworks through which teachers translate
student behaviours as well as in the organisation of learning environments (Walkerdine, 1988).
Such a framework does not take into consideration the wider context in which the students are
located, and the political consequences of such interpretations, particularly in relation to the
construction of social and gendered differences.
Robyn Zevenbergen
Psychologising Educational Difference