“…For some, there was the belief that mathematics should be, and was, incorporated within the daily classroom routines, such as setting the table for lunch (Benz, 2012; Ertekin, 2010; Lee and Ginsburg, 2007a). On the other hand, a few studies noted how teachers who work with young children prior to kindergarten do not always value mathematics over other skills such as social-emotional and explicit language skills (Simpson & Linder, 2014; Blevins-Knabe et al, 2000; Kowalski et al, 2001), and view mathematics as a static body of knowledge to be learned (Zacharos et al, 2007). Also, in considering some of the literature regarding practicing and prospective teachers’ dispositions, it seems as if they are negotiating between their identity as a mathematics teacher and prior experiences versus their identity as a teacher of young children (Gujarati, 2013; Hodgen and Askew, 2007; McCulloch et al, 2013), or between beliefs in their own mathematics ability and their role in teaching mathematics (Bates et al, 2011; Chen et al, 2014; Lee, 2005: Olander and Nyberg, 2014), or between their beliefs in teaching mathematics and their approaches to mathematical instruction (Brown, 2005; Doğan, 2012; Olander and Nyberg, 2014; Throndsen and Turmo, 2013).…”