Kelley Buchheister
University of South Carolina
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kelley Buchheister.
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2016
Kelly Lynn Mulvey; Kelley Buchheister; Kathleen V. McGrath
The purpose of this study was to investigate the relations between childrens social cognitive skills and their evaluations of resource allocations in intergroup contexts (N=73, 3-6years of age). Participants evaluated three snack-time resource allocation scenarios (self-disadvantaged, self-advantaged, and other-disadvantaged) in either a school ingroup or outgroup context. They evaluated the acceptability of the resource allocation and provided reasoning about their evaluation. Participants who had false belief theory of mind (FB ToM) competence were more likely than participants who did not have FB ToM to evaluate inequality as unacceptable. In addition, participants without FB ToM evaluated unequal allocations to another child as more okay in an outgroup condition than participants with FB ToM. Participants reasoned about their allocations differently depending on the context. Results reveal the importance of FB ToM for recognizing unfair resource allocations, especially in intergroup contexts.
Archive | 2018
Christa Jackson; Cynthia E. Taylor; Kelley Buchheister
Teacher educators need to prepare prospective teachers by encouraging them to critically examine their current beliefs about the teaching and learning of mathematics while also providing opportunities for prospective teachers to develop an equity-centered orientation. Attending to these practices in teacher preparation programs may help prospective teachers observe actions that occur in classrooms and determine effective strategies that provide the opportunity to enhance all students’ access to high-quality mathematics instruction. As mathematics teacher educators, we must recognize what prospective teachers attend to as they direct their attention to various classroom events and how they relate the events to broader principles of teaching and learning. In this chapter, we investigate what prospective teachers attend to in a classroom vignette of a student who is above grade level in mathematics and exhibits disruptive behavior during instruction. Keeping everything constant in the vignette except the student’s race and sex, we examined prospective teachers’ responses when the student was an African American male, White male, African American female, and White female. By attending specifically to race and sex, we explored whether prospective teachers demonstrated (1) an equity-centered orientation toward mathematics instruction or (2) deficit views of students based on race, sex, or the intersection of the two. Using a constant comparative method, the data were coded and analyzed using the equity noticing framework. The results indicate that prospective teachers are beginning to attend to cultural influences and their responses reveal differences not only between races but also between males and females.
Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School | 2013
Christa Jackson; Cynthia E. Taylor; Kelley Buchheister
Teaching children mathematics | 2015
Kelley Buchheister; Christa Jackson; Cynthia E. Taylor
Journal of Mathematics Education at Teachers College | 2014
Kelley Buchheister; Christa Jackson; Cynthia E. Taylor
Archive | 2017
Kelley Buchheister; Christa Jackson; Cynthia E. Taylor
Australian primary mathematics classroom | 2017
Kelley Buchheister; Christa Jackson; Cynthia E. Taylor
International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education | 2015
Christa Jackson; Cynthia E. Taylor; Kelley Buchheister
Teaching children mathematics | 2014
Cynthia E. Taylor; Kelley Buchheister; Christa Jackson; Erin R. Moss; Signe E. Kastberg
Teaching children mathematics | 2013
Cynthia E. Taylor; Kelley Buchheister; Christa Jackson