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While many accept that math is a universal, culturally indifferent subject in school, this book demonstrates that this is anything but true. Building off of a historically conscious understanding of school reform, Diaz makes the case that the language of mathematics, and the symbols through which it is communicated, is not merely about the alleged cultural indifference of mathematical thinking; rather, mathematical teaching relates to historical, cultural, political, and social understandings of equality that order who the child is and should be. Focusing on elementary math for all education reforms in America since the mid-twentieth century, Diaz offers an alternative way of thinking about the subject that recognizes the historical making of contemporary notions of inequality and difference.

Series Foreword viii
Foreword xi
Acknowledgements xix
1 Introduction: The Study of School Mathematics Is Not About Mathematics
1(11)
2 The Cultural Politics of School Math: The Problem of In/Equality in the Equal Sign
12(15)
3 Postwar Planning, Reforming Mathematics, and the Cultural (Re)Production of Children
27(16)
4 Creating the Great Society: Making New Math, the Mathematical Citizen, and the Problem of Disadvantage
43(16)
5 Civil Rights, Fears of Failure, and the Motivation of Basic Skills: Fabricating the Mathematically Dis/Abled Individual
59(17)
6 Planning the 21st-century Future: Standardizing Mathematical Kinds of People to Manage Risk
76(17)
7 The Alchemy of School Subjects and the Im/Possibilities of Reform
93(17)
Index 110
Jennifer D. Diaz is Assistant Professor of Education at Augsburg University, USA.