Loading…
Audience: Elementary School (K-5) clear filter
arrow_back View All Dates
Friday, June 26
 

9:30am PDT

Co-Learning with Data Stories: Rooting Data Practices in Humanity
Friday June 26, 2026 9:30am - 10:30am PDT
This session explores how co–learning data practices can ground mathematics and statistics in humanity. Drawing from a Youth Participatory Action Research (YPAR) initiative, where youth and adults used CODAP to explore data stories, we invite participants to engage with video excerpts illustrating relational and culturally sustaining approaches to data literacy. Using the Notice, Wonder, Feel, Act, Reimagine (Kahn et al., 2022) framework, participants will reflect on what it means to learn alongside youth and reimagine data exploration as an intergenerational co-learning practice.
Speakers
Friday June 26, 2026 9:30am - 10:30am PDT
Royal CDEF

9:30am PDT

Drawing on teacher ingenuity and collective wisdom to bring Ethnic Studies Pedagogy into Elementary Mathematics Classrooms
Friday June 26, 2026 9:30am - 10:30am PDT
This session, presented by a learning community of early career teachers, offers classroom examples of how principles of Ethnic Studies pedagogy can be infused into PK-5 math teaching. We will examine and discuss student work and classroom artifacts that show how teachers have created learning math experiences for children that are culturally relevant, community responsive, and humanizing. We will also discuss how our co-designed teacher learning community has helped us stay nourished and inspired as math educators while we navigate constraining systems of schooling and fraught sociopolitical contexts.
Speakers
Friday June 26, 2026 9:30am - 10:30am PDT
Royal A

9:30am PDT

Linguistically Equitable Mathematics Instruction for Emergent Multilinguals
Friday June 26, 2026 9:30am - 10:30am PDT
It is a misconception that math is a “universal language.” Monolingual math assessments often obscure the mathematical abilities of multilingual students, perpetuating inequitable outcomes. This session, aligned with the Curriculum and Instruction strand, empowers educators to recognize and dismantle linguistic barriers that limit access to rigorous mathematics. Through collaborative analysis of math assessments and exploration of equitable instructional strategies, participants will learn how to design linguistically accessible tasks that honor students’ diverse identities. Attendees will leave equipped to implement practices that advance TODOS’s mission of ensuring high-quality, equitable mathematics education for all learners.
Speakers
avatar for Leonor

Leonor

Educator, Newport- Mesa Unified School District
Friday June 26, 2026 9:30am - 10:30am PDT
Terrace AB

9:30am PDT

Mathematizing Our Lives
Friday June 26, 2026 9:30am - 10:30am PDT
Relationship-building with our students is a vital aspect of creating community in our classes. Come learn how to embed yourself into your content through captivating stories. Such sharing about yourself can strengthen your relationships with your students because they will get to know you while your curriculum comes to life. By modeling how we can mathematize our lives, students will recognize mathematizing as a valuable human activity and a useful tool for problem-solving in their own lives.
Speakers
Friday June 26, 2026 9:30am - 10:30am PDT
Imperial

10:45am PDT

Designing Community-Centered Data Talks: Tools for Equitable Elementary Data Science
Friday June 26, 2026 10:45am - 11:45am PDT
Today’s world is data-driven, and data literacy is foundational for student success, agency, and civic participation. This interactive session immerses participants in community-rooted data investigations that position multilingual learners and historically marginalized students as mathematical sense-makers. Using the cycle Wonder → Collect/Curate → Represent → Interpret → Act, we model data talks, accessible representations (tally tables, dot plots, bar graphs), and bilingual language supports that connect mathematics to family and neighborhood contexts. Attendees leave with a planning template, prompts, scaffolds, and a quick rubric to launch within two weeks. This session aims to have teachers place students’ own worlds at the center of rigorous math learning.
Speakers
avatar for Gianna Shields

Gianna Shields

Project Staff, SJSU
I am a doctoral student at San Josè State University and the Executive Director of the Noyce Grant at SJSU. I spent 7 years in K-5 education and have been a CSU lecturer for 6 years in the department of Elementary Education. 
SZ

Sandra Zuniga Ruiz

Project Staff, San Jose State University
Friday June 26, 2026 10:45am - 11:45am PDT
Regal

1:00pm PDT

Being Muslim in Math Education Spaces
Friday June 26, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm PDT
What can we learn from historically marginalized math practitioners from an intersectional perspective? How do we translate these findings to the daily math classroom? A 2022 Institute for Social Policy and Understanding poll reported that Muslims experience higher levels of religious discrimination than any other religious groups and that 68% have experienced Islamophobia with higher rates for American-born young adults and women (~80%). In this dynamic, collaborative workshop, participants will apply statistics on Islamophobia through a humanizing and qualitative orientation by engaging in conversation and activities together from a culturally responsive lens. The presenters, both experienced classroom and Muslim teachers, will help participants make connections on how to best support and include Muslim students in humanizing and inclusive pedagogical praxis.
Speakers
Friday June 26, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm PDT
Royal A

1:00pm PDT

Rooting Mathematics in Care: Latine Teachers Rehumanizing High School Classrooms
Friday June 26, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm PDT
This session is led by three Latine high school mathematics teachers who reimagine care as central to rooting mathematics in humanity. Co-authored with a mathematics education researcher who formerly taught high school mathematics, the session bridges classroom practice and research to highlight teachers’ lived expertise. Guided by Keeling’s (2014) framing of an ethic of care and Gutiérrez’s (2018) call to rehumanize mathematics, we share how care manifests through language, relational trust, and student brilliance. Using pláticas (Fierros & Delgado Bernal, 2016), participants will collectively reflect on how care disrupts deficit framings and cultivates belonging and shared humanity in mathematics spaces.
Friday June 26, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm PDT
Terrace AB
 
TODOS 2026 Conference
From $153.84
Share Modal

Share this link via

Or copy link

Filter sessions
Apply filters to sessions.
Filtered by Date -