“Left to myself, I wouldn’t have done it”
Dagen H in mathematics education
Keywords:
Students' identity, university mathematics, performativity, narrativeAbstract
This paper investigates how undergraduate mathematics students negotiate their identities within a collaborative problem-solving activity structured around assigned roles. Drawing on the metaphor of Dagen H—the day Sweden transitioned from left- to right-hand traffic—the study investigates what occurs when students are invited to engage in unfamiliar forms of mathematical participation. Students were assigned one of three roles—Narrator, Participant, or Specialist—each representing a different way of engaging in and talking about mathematics. By analyzing group-written reports alongside follow-up interviews, the study examines how students enact these roles and narrate their experiences. Findings highlight the interplay between role enactment and self-narration, showing how the role structure invites students to explore alternative ways of participating in mathematics and articulate who they might become within the discipline.
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Copyright (c) 2026 Luca Picariello, Peter Liljedahl, Annamaria Miranda, Cristina Coppola

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.