Exemplification as a catalyst for equitable and reflective mathematics education
Christopher CharlesPurpose
This paper explores how elementary teachers conceptualized and enacted exemplification through learner-generated examples to support equitable mathematics instruction in an under-resourced, faith-based Caribbean school. It examines relationships among instructional practice, teacher identity and the integration of cultural and spiritual knowledge in mathematics teaching.
Design/methodology/approach
The study adopted a qualitative case study design grounded in Sociocultural Theory and Culturally Responsive Teaching. Six elementary teachers participated in a practice-based professional development initiative. Lesson plans, teacher reflections and a focus group discussion were analyzed thematically.
Findings
Learner-generated exemplification supported student agency, conceptual understanding and teachers' recognition of students' mathematical contributions when instructional tasks emphasized generation, variation and justification of examples. However, student hesitation, time constraints, and teacher discomfort were also evident, pointing to the emotional labor and tensions involved in enacting open-ended equity-oriented pedagogy.
Research limitations/implications
As a single, context-specific case study, the findings are not intended to be generalizable. Nevertheless, the study highlights the need for further research on exemplification, teacher learning and equity-oriented mathematics instruction in under-resourced and culturally diverse settings.
Originality/value
The findings suggest the importance of sustained, practice-based professional development that supports teachers in designing and facilitating learner-generated exemplification tasks that purposefully draw on students' cultural and spiritual resources. The study illustrates how culturally responsive mathematics instruction can affirm student voice, promote inclusion and advance educational equity in Caribbean and comparable Global South contexts. This paper contributes to the exemplification literature by foregrounding cultural, spiritual and emotional dimensions of equity-oriented mathematics teaching in a faith-based Caribbean context, an underrepresented setting in mathematics education research.