TY - JOUR
T1 - Beyond language
T2 - conceptualizing epistemic violence against Black immigrant students in mathematics education
AU - Valoyes-Chávez, Luz
AU - Andrade-Molina, Melissa
AU - Montecino, Alex
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, FIZ Karlsruhe.
PY - 2023/11
Y1 - 2023/11
N2 - This paper provides on-the-ground accounts of epistemic violence against Black immigrant children in mathematics classrooms. From a critical feminist perspective, we introduce Dotson’s notion of silencing as an enactment of epistemic violence. According to Dotson, one way to enact epistemic violence is to damage a particular group’s ability to speak and be heard. A successful act of communication depends on the audience’s willingness and ability to “hear” the speaker. Therefore, denying this reciprocity in communication is a form of epistemic violence. Using this conceptualization, we conducted a secondary data analysis from a larger study aimed at enhancing teachers’ knowledge and abilities to implement problem-solving teaching. We identify and characterize three practices of silencing Black immigrant students in Chilean mathematics classrooms that damage their agency as knowers and doers of mathematics. Beyond language issues, we show that silencing is a form of anti-Black onto-epistemic violence that prevents Black immigrant students from being recognized as legitimate subjects of knowledge in mathematics classrooms.
AB - This paper provides on-the-ground accounts of epistemic violence against Black immigrant children in mathematics classrooms. From a critical feminist perspective, we introduce Dotson’s notion of silencing as an enactment of epistemic violence. According to Dotson, one way to enact epistemic violence is to damage a particular group’s ability to speak and be heard. A successful act of communication depends on the audience’s willingness and ability to “hear” the speaker. Therefore, denying this reciprocity in communication is a form of epistemic violence. Using this conceptualization, we conducted a secondary data analysis from a larger study aimed at enhancing teachers’ knowledge and abilities to implement problem-solving teaching. We identify and characterize three practices of silencing Black immigrant students in Chilean mathematics classrooms that damage their agency as knowers and doers of mathematics. Beyond language issues, we show that silencing is a form of anti-Black onto-epistemic violence that prevents Black immigrant students from being recognized as legitimate subjects of knowledge in mathematics classrooms.
KW - Anti-Blackness
KW - Black immigrant students
KW - Epistemic violence
KW - Mathematics communication
KW - Practices of silencing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85165874051&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11858-023-01512-4
DO - 10.1007/s11858-023-01512-4
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85165874051
SN - 1863-9690
VL - 55
SP - 1125
EP - 1137
JO - ZDM - Mathematics Education
JF - ZDM - Mathematics Education
IS - 6
ER -