In this symposium, we continue the discussion on attending to student diversity in mathematics education (Quane et al., 2024) by exploring strategies that promote inclusive mathematics education. In doing so, we continue to acknowledge that classrooms comprise of diverse student populations (Quane et al., 2024) with Australian classrooms experiencing higher proportions of diversity than the international average. In terms of equity and inclusion, Australia, according to a recent OECD report, is one of four OECD countries whose education systems did not have a “formal or operational” definition of inclusion (OECD, 2023, p. 25). This is problematic as there is no consensus on a common definition, and, therefore, interpretations of what inclusion means are inconsistent. In turn, a lack of a standard definition of inclusion may result in educational practices that do not align with the principles of inclusion. Of note, the Early Years Learning Framework does provide a definition of inclusion for the education of children (birth to eight years).