Posted on 11/14/2006 10:22:11 AM PST by siddude
SEATTLE For the second time in a generation, education officials are rethinking the teaching of math in American schools. The changes are being driven by students lagging performance on international tests and mathematicians warnings that more than a decade of so-called reform math critics call it fuzzy math has crippled students with its de-emphasizing of basic drills and memorization in favor of allowing children to find their own ways to solve problems.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
Now that the Dems are in to save the day.
Those that understand math and those who don't.
Garde la Foi, mes amis! Nous nous sommes les sauveurs de la République! Maintenant et Toujours!
(Keep the Faith, my friends! We are the saviors of the Republic! Now and Forever!)
LonePalm, le Républicain du verre cassé (The Broken Glass Republican)
Funny how that pendulum always swings back to "Basics" when all those politically correct programs don't work.
Basics? You mean like indoctrinating children in the gay activist agenda?
And probably even in English.
http://timss.bc.edu/timss2003.html
If you can't read this, thank a Democrat!
2 + 2 = Manmade Global Warming
And take away the friggin calculators! Kids are NOT learning math when they're punching on a calculator.
It's an unfortunate fact that math is neither intuitive nor entertaining for 85% of human beings. That's why it's crucial to memorize common information and to develop a code-cracking skill set through repetition.
It's not important for us to jolly 85% of kids along. It's important that the 15% who will change technology and expand science have essential foundation to pursue their interests in college. We don't need any more math failures with English degrees.
Here's a solution. Disband government indoctrination camps entirely, give schooling back to the individual, and give the tax dollars back to the taxpayers.
More one size that fits nobody, solutions.
I was good at math, but my kids are great!!!!!!!
When my son was 7, she took him to a garage sell. He was calculating the change for things that people were buying faster than the people could type it in their cashier.
He's now 12, and in Algebra 1. He did poorly on 1 test, so we gave him some extra work and showed him what he did wrong. On his last test he got 100% plus the extra credit.
He is truly amazing.
My daughters are also very good. They are only in the 4th grade, so we'll see how they do in the future.
That said, I do have problems with the math being taught. In Algebra 1, there is not enough homework, and the class is going tooo fast in order to complete the book for testing in April (school doesn't end until the middle of June).
Also, I think that new concepts should be taught, but at the same time the old concepts need to be reinforced. Homework should be a mix of new concepts and a reinforcement of old concepts. Because there is no reinforcement of old concepts, my son is forgetting the older concepts by the time there is a test. My hubby and I understand that my son needs reinforcements, so we are giving him extra work.
In elementary school, math is taught by teachers that were not necessarily very good at math to begin with. The teachers are bored by math, and don't know how to make it interesting.
My kids have been in public and private schools, and they do not use calculators in either. My son is in Algebra 1 this year, and his teacher said that they will start using graphing calculators after the first of the year. This is the first time he has ever used a calculator. In fact, he doesn't like using calculators. He says it's just faster to do it in his head.
Exactly correct. Making children learn arithmetic properly (making sure they can do it quickly and accurately) internalizes the rules of algebra before they begin to learn algebra. And then making students become proficient at algebra enables them to learn calculus properly.
Guess it's time to throw a few more billion dollars at the problem, huh? That'll fix it!
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