×
Skip to main content

M2 Fellowship

About the program

Loyola University Chicago’s Institute for Racial Justice's Men of Math (M2) Fellowship is for self-identifying male mathematics instructors to increase their capacity as culturally-informed instructional leaders. The fellowship also aims to build community between the fellows as self-identifying men who teach math to students in grades 6-12.

See how Men of Math fellow D’Juan James brings culturally-relevant mathematics into the classroom with students at Butler College Prep in Chicago. Watch the video.

How to apply

We are now accepting applications for our 2023 cohort! The deadline to submit is November 30, 2022.

Criteria for nominees

  • Self-identifying male mathematics instructor who teach students in grades 6-12
  • Currently teaching in a non-selective Chicagoland public school or public charter school
  • 30 credits or more of collegiate mathematics, engineering, and or physics
  • 3 or more years of mathematics instructional experience with students in grades 6-12
  • Letter of support from Principal, Assistant Principal, Instructional Coach, or Dean of Instruction

What do Fellows receive?

  • 1:1 coaching on culturally-informed mathematics instruction
  • Membership in a professional learning community of self-identifying men who teach math to students in grades 6-12 
  • $3000 award

Curriculum and Facilitators

The curriculum for the professional learning community includes two parts. One part weaves strategies for implementing connections between math assessment strategies with culturally relevant pedagogy via race-conscious historical grounding. The second part builds relationships with Black and Latinx students through race- and gender-conscious socio-emotional learning strategies.

Fellows collaboratively learn from our esteemed and expert facilitators and share problem-solving strategies that apply across participating schools and different levels of middle and high school mathematics topics.

Nathan Alexander Dr. Nathan Alexander
M2 Facilitator, Mathematics
David Wallace Dr. David Wallace
M2 Facilitator, Social-Emotional

Questions about the program?

Contact us at racialjustice@luc.edu.

About the program

Loyola University Chicago’s Institute for Racial Justice's Men of Math (M2) Fellowship is for self-identifying male mathematics instructors to increase their capacity as culturally-informed instructional leaders. The fellowship also aims to build community between the fellows as self-identifying men who teach math to students in grades 6-12.

See how Men of Math fellow D’Juan James brings culturally-relevant mathematics into the classroom with students at Butler College Prep in Chicago. Watch the video.

How to apply

We are now accepting applications for our 2023 cohort! The deadline to submit is November 30, 2022.

Criteria for nominees

  • Self-identifying male mathematics instructor who teach students in grades 6-12
  • Currently teaching in a non-selective Chicagoland public school or public charter school
  • 30 credits or more of collegiate mathematics, engineering, and or physics
  • 3 or more years of mathematics instructional experience with students in grades 6-12
  • Letter of support from Principal, Assistant Principal, Instructional Coach, or Dean of Instruction

What do Fellows receive?

  • 1:1 coaching on culturally-informed mathematics instruction
  • Membership in a professional learning community of self-identifying men who teach math to students in grades 6-12 
  • $3000 award

Curriculum and Facilitators

The curriculum for the professional learning community includes two parts. One part weaves strategies for implementing connections between math assessment strategies with culturally relevant pedagogy via race-conscious historical grounding. The second part builds relationships with Black and Latinx students through race- and gender-conscious socio-emotional learning strategies.

Fellows collaboratively learn from our esteemed and expert facilitators and share problem-solving strategies that apply across participating schools and different levels of middle and high school mathematics topics.

Nathan Alexander Dr. Nathan Alexander
M2 Facilitator, Mathematics
David Wallace Dr. David Wallace
M2 Facilitator, Social-Emotional

Questions about the program?

Contact us at racialjustice@luc.edu.