What does linguistic or cultural diversity look like in a mathematics classroom? How does such diversity influence the teaching or learning of.mathe- matics? In this chapter, I address these and related questions. Specifically, I draw on Bakhtin's notion of heteroglossia to analyse the literature on teaching and learning mathematics in linguistically diverse classrooms. Based on this analysis, I describe and discuss four tensions that arise in linguistically diverse mathematics classrooms: tensions between school and home languages; • between· formal. and informal lan- guage in mathematics; between language policy and mathematics classroom prac- tice; and between a language for learning mathematics and a language for getting on in the world. These tensions can all be traced to an underlying tension between what. Bakhtin calls centripetal and centrifugal forces in language. I conclude by consider- ing some of the implications of my analysis for equity in mathematics teaching. .
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Grove, C. A., Rodriguez-Ramirez, A., Merschel, G., Tjallingii, R., Zinke, J., Macia, A., & Brummer, G.-J. A. (2015). UV-Spectral Luminescence Scanning: Technical Updates and Calibration Developments (pp. 563–581). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-9849-5_23