This project explores pre-service teacher's experiences with learning,
teaching and the nature of mathematics during an elementary mathematics
curriculum course. I focus on interpreting student participants'
evolving images of mathematics/teaching, to make sense of my own
evolving images of mathematics/teaching. This inquiry is framed by
principles of complexity, which is a post-positivist and holistic
framework for interpreting social phenomena. The methodology is oriented
by narrative inquiry, which is a means to notice and interpret the
co-constructed storied experiences of others and self. As a result of
student participant data analysis processes, an interpretive lens
emerged for understanding a student's evolving images of
mathematics/teaching in terms of co-negotiating tensions, dissonances
and contradictions among available narratives within a participant's
apparent experiences. My interpretations of student stories are a means
of understanding my own story as a negotiation of competing narratives.
The processes and products of this inquiry may provide insight into the
complex question of teachers changing and changing teachers.