Emma Gargroetzi
· Assistant ProfessorVerifiedUniversity of Texas at Austin · Psychiatry
Active 2018–2026
About
Emma Gargroetzi is an assistant professor of STEM education in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction at The University of Texas at Austin. Her research focuses on the intersection of identity, power, and educational justice in the mathematical lives of children and youth, drawing inspiration from her 15 years of experience working with young people in New York City, Latin America, and California's Bay Area. Her work examines the use of quantitative reasoning in youth, civic composing, and the possibilities for educational dignity within mathematics learning environments. Emma predominantly employs ethnographic methods and video-based social interaction analysis in her research. As a 2022 NAEd/Spencer Postdoctoral Fellow, Emma is working on the Transdisciplinary Civic Learning Collaborative, which aims to combine literary and quantitative practices for civic learning and social problem-solving. Her project explores how transdisciplinary collaboration between Humanities and STEM educators can foster youth identities and engagement in literacy, mathematics, and civic life, with a focus on building an anti-oppressive and inclusive democracy. Emma holds a Ph.D. from Stanford University with a dual focus on race, inequality, and language in education and mathematics education, along with master's degrees from Columbia University Teachers College and Brooklyn College, and a bachelor's degree from Vassar College.
Research topics
- Political Science
- Sociology
- Pedagogy
- Psychology
- Mathematics education
- Ecology
- Computer Science
- Social psychology
- Cognitive psychology
- Linguistics
- Law
- Public relations
- Developmental psychology
- Geography
- Engineering
Selected publications
Science Practices for College, Career, and Civic Readiness
2026-04-16
book-chapterSenior authorThe Journal of Mathematical Behavior · 2025-04-21 · 2 citations
article1st authorCorrespondingScience Education · 2025-04-20 · 2 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorABSTRACT Attention to emotion could offer insight into supporting the science‐informed civic participation of young people. We drew on sociocultural views of emotion, civic participation, and science literacies to examine digital civic media about climate change produced by youth during the 2020 U.S. presidential election, investigating intersections of emotional, civic, and scientific practices of making meaning. Using mixed‐methods, we analyzed 82 media pieces created by youth across the US. With an analytic framework informed by prior research and adapted to meet our data, we found two common patterns that emerged in over half of the data set: (1) fear and/or despair around the impacts of climate change and (2) anger over inaction around mitigating climate change. Additionally, we found that the fear/despair pattern was associated with youth engagement in civic empathy and the anger pattern was associated with youth practices of critique. We also identified less common and less distinct patterns, including positive emotion around actions, guilt around causes, and generalized worry across youth civic authors. We use these findings to suggest that emotion is entangled in youth civic participation around climate change, and that such participation can be afforded and constrained by emotion. We offer implications for teaching and use our findings to call attention to the need for science education that attends to the emotional nature of youth social practices within and beyond science‐related civic issues.
The New Educator · 2025-02-10 · 2 citations
article1st authorCorrespondingJournal for Research in Mathematics Education · 2024-05-01 · 5 citations
article1st authorCorrespondingMultiply minoritized learners face racialized, gendered, and ableist hierarchies of mathematical ability that shape the organization of schools and classrooms and can significantly challenge access to identities as mathematical learners and practitioners as well as to fundamental human dignity. Classrooms and everyday interactions can perpetuate or interrupt these conditions. Contributing to questions about the relationships among identity, power, and dignity in mathematics learning, this article presents a positional interaction analysis of Gisela, a Disabled 10th-grade Latina student, as she took up, challenged, and renegotiated identities of mathematical thinker, learner, and community member over the course of one school year.
Mathematics Teacher Learning and Teaching PK-12 · 2024-03-01 · 1 citations
article1st authorCorrespondingThis activity engages students with the concept of mathematics identity to expand conceptions of what mathematics is and therefore what doing mathematics and being mathematical can mean.
The Mathematics of Parental Organizing Against Impending School Closures (Poster 12)
2024-01-01
article1st authorCorrespondingProceedings. · 2023-10-03
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingIn the US in recent years, public engagement in public schools has become highly politicized, reflecting the polarized discourses circulating in media and inflamed by national figures. “Official” spaces for public input exist alongside multiple less officially policy-relevant spaces where youth and adults learn and negotiate the function/ing of public education. This symposium examines how diverse school-adjacent spheres of public life function as pedagogical spaces - spaces where the discourses and technologies of schooling are learned through the cognizant and non-cognizant design and organization of discourse and activity. The cases considered span from youth-centered spaces such as the school bus and a middle school debate team to a case examining the intersection of how news and social media is negotiated at a public committee meeting and closing with two contrasting examples of school district-sponsored public forums addressing issues such as overcrowding and budget.
Teacher Political Learning as Emergent Practice
2023-01-01
article1st authorCorrespondingLearning as Emergent Practice in the Transdisciplinary Civic Learning Collaborative
Proceedings. · 2023-10-03
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingConceptualizing learning as emergent practice, we explore the political learning of teachers in a teacher learning community.Drawing on data from two years of monthly virtual meetings, we identify four emergent practices that have come to cohere in the group: multivocality, interrogating boundaries, identity inquiry, and affective attunement.After a brief summary of these practices, we trace their negotiation in one interactional episode.
Frequent coauthors
- 6 shared
Lynne Zummo
Natural History Museum of Utah
- 5 shared
Antero Garcia
Stanford University
- 5 shared
Rosa Chavez
- 5 shared
Jennifer M. Langer-Osuna
Stanford University
- 4 shared
Jen Munson
Northwestern University
- 3 shared
Hakeoung Hannah Lee
- 2 shared
Kimiko E. Lange
- 2 shared
Alexandra Aguilar
The University of Texas at Austin
Education
PhD, Curriculum and Teacher Education
Stanford University
- 2011
Master of Science, Teaching Students with Disabilities
Brooklyn College
- 2008
Master of Arts, International and Transcultural Studies
Teachers College of Columbia University
- 2005
Bachelor of Arts, Political Science
Vassar College
Awards & honors
- NAEd/Spencer Postdoctoral Fellowship (2022 - 2024)
- Spencer Small Grant (2021 - 2022)
- Gerald J. Lieberman Fellowship, Stanford University (2019 -…
- Dean's Collaborative Learning Fund, Stanford Graduate School…
- Haas Graduate Public Service Fellow, Stanford University Haa…
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