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CONCEPTUAL ANALYSIS article

Front. Educ.

Sec. Teacher Education

Teachers' Conceptions of AI for Inclusive Mathematics Learning: A Conceptual Analysis

Provisionally accepted
Julián  Ricardo Gómez NiñoJulián Ricardo Gómez Niño1Liliana  Patricia Árias DelgadoLiliana Patricia Árias Delgado1Chiappe  AndrésChiappe Andrés1*Fabiola  Sáez-DelgadoFabiola Sáez-Delgado2
  • 1Universidad de La Sabana, Chía, Colombia
  • 2Universidad Catolica de la Santisima Concepcion, Concepción, Chile

The final, formatted version of the article will be published soon.

Artificial intelligence is increasingly entering mathematics classrooms through tools for feedback, personalisation, assessment support, and instructional decision-making; however, its potential to contribute to inclusion depends less on technical availability than on how teachers conceptualise what AI is, what it can legitimately do, and what risks it introduces. The discussion is framed primarily around K–12 mathematics classrooms (primary and secondary) and targets both pre-service preparation and in-service professional development for mathematics teachers. This Conceptual Analysis clarifies the construct of teachers' conceptions of AI for inclusive mathematics learning and argues that such conceptions shape not only adoption decisions but also the quality and equity of classroom use. In a first approach, the paper delineates analytically distinct dimensions of conceptions, including beliefs about AI capabilities and limits, professional role and identity, ethical governance concerns, and perceived institutional conditions. Then, it outlines a minimal typology showing how different configurations of these dimensions can generate predictable inclusion-related barriers, such as over-automation of pedagogical judgement, opacity in feedback and decision processes, and unequal exposure to risk in vulnerable contexts. Later, it synthesises governance-linked conditions for informed engagement, making explicit the safeguards under which AI-supported practices are more compatible with inclusion and the criteria under which cautious nonadoption is professionally warranted. The analysis culminates in actionable implications for teacher education, foregrounding the capabilities required for accountable mediation of AI-supported practice in mathematics classrooms, including boundary-setting, bias-awareness, transparency, and context-sensitive orchestration.

Keywords: AI and Pedagogy, Artificial intelligence in education, inclusive mathematics education, Teacher beliefs, teacher professional identity

Received: 30 Dec 2025; Accepted: 09 Feb 2026.

Copyright: © 2026 Gómez Niño, Árias Delgado, Andrés and Sáez-Delgado. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

* Correspondence: Chiappe Andrés

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