Critical Issues in Mathematics Education 2020: Today’s Mathematics, Social Justice, and Implications for Schools
Due to ongoing disruptions from COVID-19, the 2020 CIME workshop took place as a series of web-based events over the course of Spring 2020. This page serves as a master list of all CIME 2020 presentations to date, with direct links to the recorded presentations.
2020 Workshop Description
Today’s Mathematics, Social Justice, and Implications for Schools
Workshop Organizers: Meredith Broussard (New York Unviersity), Victor Donnay (Bryn Mawr College), Courtney Ginsberg (Math for America), Luis Leyva (Vanderbilt University), Candice Price (Smith College), Chris Rasmussen (San Diego State University), LEAD Katherine Stevenson (California State University, Northridge), William Tate (Washington University in St. Louis)
Sophisticated computational and quantitative techniques drive important decision-making in modern society. Such methods and algorithms are meant to improve the efficiency with which we work and the ways in which we live. An understanding of the mathematical underpinnings of these techniques can be used either to disrupt or to perpetuate inequities, and thus such knowledge constitutes power in the modern world. How does this powerful knowledge get used for the common good and get passed on to our children equitably? What does it imply about the kinds of mathematical skills, practices, and dispositions students should learn in schools, colleges, and universities?
Three guiding questions:
1. What are the major areas where computational and quantitative methods have influence, and what does work in these areas imply for mathematics and the mathematics community?
- Gerrymandering and apportionment
- Recruitment, enrollment, and retention decision making to drive “academic efficiency” (e.g., Student data analytics to inform access to academic programs and classes)
- Sentencing, bail, and parole (e.g., artificial intelligence based models used by judges)
- Systems that guide policing, driving, and medical decisions (e.g., artificial intelligence & visual recognition systems in investigations, navigation, treatment options, drug development)
- Efficiency and pricing via online systems (e.g., surge pricing, routing algorithms)
- Determination of loan or insurance terms
- Surveillance of email, mail, phone, online trace (e.g., Hong Kong, China, England, US)
2. What are the social justice and educational equity implications of mathematical work in these areas?
- Who is impacted and how are traditionally underserved communities disproportionately and negatively impacted?
- What are the human capital development implications? Who gets access to these methods?
- What current and historical inequities is this work exposing or perpetuating?
- How do computational systems impact privacy and social/political movements? (Surveillance dampens free speech while social media facilitates grassroots action.)
- How might negative impacts of computational and quantitative methods be countered? Can we use these methods to design for social good?
3. In light of the above, what are the implications for the mathematical knowledge, skills, and ways of interacting to be developed in schools?
- What might society, as well as specific communities and families, want children to learn in school and students to learn in colleges and universities?
- What mathematics is important for educators to nurture in order to build a more just society?
- How might the enactment of different pedagogical approaches (e.g., problem-based learning, inquiry based approaches, culturally responsive pedagogy, flipped classrooms) either broaden or limit opportunities for equitable quantitative and computational learning?
- How might various technologies and digital tools be used to promote equitable student learning of computational techniques and concepts?
- What are the implications for teacher preparation at the elementary, secondary, and postsecondary levels of mathematics education?
Related Program: 2020 Mathical Book Prize Awards Announcement
Since 2018, the Mathical Book Prize awards announcement has taken place in conjunction with the annual CIME conference. MSRI extends our thanks to the CIME organizers and participants for joining us to share and discuss each year’s winning titles, as well as strategies for use in the mathematics classroom and beyond.
March 12, 2020
- Welcoming Remarks
- Katherine Stevenson (California State University, Northridge): Introduction to CIME 2020 and speaker David Daley
- David Daley (FairVote): Why Your Vote Doesn't Count
- David Eisenbud (MSRI) and Candice Price (Smith College): Mathical Book Prize 2020 Awards Announcement
- Katherine Stevenson (California State University, Northridge): Introduction to speaker Wesley Pegden
- Wesley Pegden (Carnegie Mellon University): Bringing Mathematics to the Courtroom
- Kate Belin (Fannie Lou Hamer Freedom High School) and Katherine Stevenson (California State University, Northridge): Q&A
- Lisa Goldberg (University of California, Berkeley): Hot Hands: What Data Science Can (and Can't) Tell Us About Basketball Trends
- Nicol Turner Lee (The Brookings Institution), Unconscious Bias
- Saber Khan (Processing Foundation), Identity & Ethics
- Q&A
- Estrella Johnson (Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University), Some unintended consequences of active learning
- Math for America (MƒA) teachers: Kate Belin (Fannie Lou Hamer Freedom High School), Sharon Collins (New Heights Academy Charter School), Sage Forbes-Gray (Sunset Park High School), Representation in the Math Classroom: Access, Advocacy, and Agency
- Padmanabhan Seshaiyer (George Mason University), K-12 to Post-Secondary Viewpoint Critical Issues in Mathematics Education
- Hyman Bass (University of Michigan), 'Mathematics and Social Justice': An undergraduate course. What could this be?
- Nathan Alexander (Morehouse College), Mathematical Models in the Sociological Imagination
- Lincoln Chandler (Chandler Decision Services), Pursuing Racial Equity within Schools
- Q&A
- Dan Reinholz (San Diego State University), Preparing teachers to notice, name, and disrupt racial and gender inequity
- Rico Gutstein (University of Illinois at Chicago), Preparing Students Today for Whatever Tomorrow Brings