About

This site is written by Rachel Lambert, a former classroom teacher, special education teacher, and currently an associate professor in the Gervitz Graduate School of Education at University of California Santa Barbara. I was trained as a mathematics educator at Mathematics in the City, a collaboration between City College in New York City and the Freudenthal Institute in the Netherlands, and as a disability studies scholar at Teachers College, the Graduate Center of CUNY, and my last academic job, Chapman University. You can contact me at rlambert@ucsb.edu

My scholarly work investigates the intersections between disability studies in education and mathematics education.  I have conducted longitudinal studies of how learners with and without disabilities construct identities as mathematics learners, and how mathematical pedagogy shapes disability. I have found that students use multiple discourses and practices to understand themselves as math learners, and that their understandings shift over time based on pedagogy. Students in a classroom that encouraged discussion and multiple strategies, for example, saw themselves as competent learners of mathematics because they were able to ask questions, persist in solving problems, and present multiple strategies.  The same children, as the class transitioned to a mathematics of memorization, were more likely to describe themselves as either fast or slow. Disability and ability both shifted as the pedagogy shifted, suggesting that the way we organize mathematics classrooms matters significantly for how we understand learners, and in term, for how they understand themselves. My work looks at children’s developing relationships with mathematics as intersectional, relational, and emotional.

My current work is on understanding the differences in research and practice across mathematics education and special education and understanding how teachers can deepen participation in the standards of mathematical practice. I am also very interested in neurodiversity, Universal Design for Learning, and their implications for mathematics teaching and learning.

13 responses to “About”

  1. Sarah Baglio Avatar
    Sarah Baglio

    Hi Rachel! I saw your inspiring presentation at NCTM with Dylan and Edward. I am wondering if you can send me the slides for all three of you. I would like to share some of their journeys with my HS students who also struggle in math and are searching for their own strategies.
    Thanks,
    Sarah

  2. Maria Fuccillo Avatar
    Maria Fuccillo

    Hi,

    My name is Maria Fuccillo and I am the Lower School Math Coordinator at Holy Trinity Catholic School in Washington , D.C. I am currently enrolled in a Math Leadership (prek-6) program through John Hopkins University. I LOVE your blog and actually hoping to make my own blog one day. I believe that learning disabilities should be seen as just differences, and everyone has a different way of learner. I would be so grateful to be able to talk with you about your blog and your research done.

    Thank you so much for taking the time to consider talking with me.

    Kind Regards,
    Maria Fuccillo 240-672-2909

  3. 2ndgradehtsblog Avatar

    Hi,

    My name is Maria Fuccillo and I am the Lower School Math Coordinator at Holy Trinity Catholic School in Washington , D.C. I am currently enrolled in a Math Leadership Program through John Hopkins University. I love your blog and believe that all students have a different way of learning, and that learning disabilities should be “reframed”. I hope one day to create a blog myself.

    I would be so grateful to have a chance to speak with you on this topic. Thank you for considering!

    Kind Regards,
    Maria Fuccillo 240-672-2909

  4. Mark Koester Avatar
    Mark Koester

    Hi Rachel, I am a math educator at MSU Denver. I learn so much from your work. My question is related to accessibility issues for one of our secondary math education students. Do you know of any teacher blogs of math teachers who use a wheelchair? Our student would like to see how he can teach mathematics before he student teaches next semester. Thanks, Mark

  5. Catherine Castillo Avatar

    Do you have contact information for speaking requests?

    1. Rachel Lambert Avatar
  6. Maria Fuccillo Avatar
    Maria Fuccillo

    Rachel,

    My name is Maria Fuccillo and I am currently a Lower School Math Coordinator at Holy Trinity in Washington, DC.. I LOVE your blog and website and would love to have a 30 minute conversation with you about how you started it as I am looking to do the same or help someone with theirs.

    My email is mfuccillo91@gmail.com. Would love to connect!

    Best,
    Maria

  7. David Paliughi Avatar
    David Paliughi

    Dr. Lambert,

    I love your work. I just finished Rethinking… I’m really interested in you working with my staff. We’re a small group in San Bruno California. Would you ever consider doing contracted PD work?

    1. Rachel Lambert Avatar

      Yes, please email me at rlambert@ucsb.edu

  8. Jennifer L Levy Avatar
    Jennifer L Levy

    Hello Rachel,

    I heard you speak at NCSM this year and immediately bought your book on disability and mathematics. It was so confirming to hear and read that my ideas about teaching children with learning disabilities is not crazy! I work mostly one-on-one with tier 3 students who have difficulties primarily in math, but also some other issues (executive function, dyslexia, ADD). I was wondering if you could recommend some good resources for working with students with profound dyscalculia? Most everything I find is aimed at tier 1 and 2 students and it is totally devoid of context, multiple solution pathways, and connection to big ideas. Any help would be greatly appreciated!

    Jen Levy

  9. Tracey Iglehart Avatar
    Tracey Iglehart

    Hi Dr. Lambert,

    I attended your session at the Make Math Moments Virtual Summit. I don’t know if you remember meeting me at Berkeley Unified School district with two district leaders, back in Jan 2020. You were kind enough to meet with the 3 of us at the BUSD offices before you spoke at SVMI the next day. I was using you in an attempt to convince the leadership to support CGI. You were a very willing accomplice. After that, I took a whole bunch of Special Ed teachers and other math teacher leaders to the Silicon Valley Math Initiative meeting at which you spoke. You really changed the way I think and talk about access to mathematical thinking.

    I am now at a site, back in the classroom and I have convinced our mild-moderate special ed teacher, the RTI (Response to Intervention) teacher and our principal to come with me to see you at SVMI on Dec. 12th. Two of us have read your work and we’re all trying to get our principal to understand that math instruction needs to be more than following the pacing the guide. He can be convinced, but it’s taking some time.

    What I’m hoping you’ll talk about at SVMI is the idea that student agency is equity. That is such a big, important idea that very few practitioners and leaders realize. Equity is one of our principles in Berkeley and I’m hoping our principal can begin to understand that our current model of only explicit, direct instruction in which curriculum dictates the pacing and learning is measured by how well students mimic, allows for almost no student agency and very much limits access and equity.

    Will you be including this idea in your presentation at SVMI? If not, can you meet me again, this time with my principal in Berkeley to convince him? (just kidding)

    Looking forward to seeing you virtually at Bluesky (cheers to the end of Twitter) and in person at SVMI.

    Kindly,

    Tracey Iglehart- Berkeley Unified School District

  10. Libby Miles Sapadin Avatar
    Libby Miles Sapadin

    Dr. Lambert, I’m finishing up a grad degree in math leadership at Bank Street in NYC. Your new book has been so instrumental to my research, and I will be presenting my culminating project this Tuesday evening 7-8pm EST. Please email me if you are interested in joining via zoom! Thank you for all that you do. esapadin@bankstreet.edu

    1. Rachel Lambert Avatar

      I just saw this! Congratulations! I hope it went well.

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