Abstract
Teaching mathematics responsibly involves more than the application of disciplinary and pedagogical knowledge; it also involves appreciating and implementing flexible and dynamic interactional patterns that value diversity and students’ idiosyncratic attempts to make sense of learning. New ways-of-being a teacher that support the unpredictable and creative in learning reach into, yet beyond, the psychological and sociocultural for their philosophical ground. An overarching poststructural arm of analysis assumes that power relations inherent in interactional patterns in learning and work constitute or create practice.
Mary Klein