Headshot of Tesha Sengupta-Irving

Research Bio

Tesha Sengupta-Irving’s research explores the sociocultural, disciplinary, and political dimensions of children’s mathematics learning. Broadly, her work asks a deceptively simple question: What, in addition to mathematics, do children learn when they learn mathematics? Dr. Sengupta-Irving works closely with teachers to understand and design pedagogical approaches that promote racially minoritized children's fluency in disciplinary ideas and practices, while also engendering a sense of joy, agency, and collectivism in learning.  Through a mix of prolonged ethnographic study, teaching experiments, and microanalyses of children’s interactions, her work generates new knowledge to resist neoliberal logics that render math learning a stratifying project of race, class, and gender in schools.

Research Expertise and Interest

STEM education, learning sciences, inequality & resistance, politics of learning, case study & design-based research

Teaching

Courses taught during the three most recent terms
2026 Spring
  • Will STEM Save US? The Promises and Perils of STEM Education  [EDUC 166]  

  • Special Problems in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education  [EDUC 223B]  

  • Special Study and Research  [EDUC 299]  

2025 Fall
  • Special Study and Research  [EDUC 299]  

  • The Art Of Teaching  [EDUC 375]  

2025 Spring
  • Designed to Disrupt: Critical Approaches to the Design of Learning Environments  [EDUC 230A]  

  • Technology, Computing, and Data in Classrooms  [EDUC 295B]  

  • Special Study and Research  [EDUC 299]