The Case Against Algebra 908
HughPickens.com writes: Dana Goldstein writes at Slate that political scientist Andrew Hacker proposes replacing algebra II and calculus in the high school and college with a practical course in statistics for citizenship. According to Hacker, only mathematicians and some engineers actually use advanced math in their day-to-day work and even the doctors, accountants, and coders of the future shouldn't have to master abstract math that they'll never need. For many math is often an impenetrable barrier to academic success. Algebra II, which includes polynomials and logarithms, and is required by the new Common Core curriculum standards used by 47 states and territories, drives dropouts at both the high school and college levels. Hacker's central argument is that advanced mathematics requirements, like algebra, trigonometry and calculus, are "a harsh and senseless hurdle" keeping far too many Americans from completing their educations and leading productive lives. "We are really destroying a tremendous amount of talent—people who could be talented in sports writing or being an emergency medical technician, but can't even get a community college degree," says Hacker. "I regard this math requirement as highly irrational." According to Hacker many of those who struggled through a traditional math regimen feel that doing so annealed their character while critics says that mathematics is used as a hoop, a badge, a totem to impress outsiders and elevate a profession's status. "It's not hard to understand why Caltech and M.I.T. want everyone to be proficient in mathematics. But it's not easy to see why potential poets and philosophers face a lofty mathematics bar. Demanding algebra across the board actually skews a student body, not necessarily for the better."
Ban math (Score:5, Funny)
Math should be banned and replaced with something more practical in the USA... like watching reruns of Seinfeld, or learning on how to turn off the ceiling fan if the batteries in the remote die.
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Math should be banned and replaced with something more practical in the USA... learning on how to turn off the ceiling fan if the batteries in the remote die.
That can be done?
Re:Ban math (Score:5, Insightful)
We could ask the Chinese. They likely designed and built the thing.
Great idea. In fact, I think you've hit upon a workable solution for this whole issue:
"Thanks, Mr. Chin, you're a lifesaver. That thing was shining in my eyes all night and keeping me cold all winter. Hey, while I've got you on the phone, can you help us a little with our space program? It's like, all "polly-nomials" and stuff. It's so stupid, I don't see why we have to learn this shit. I'm like, I just want to go to Mars--I don't need to hear about, like, Pythagoras or Edison or whatever. I mean, I've got plenty of street-smarts. And I've got people skills. That's what's really important."
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
This is when the second amendment becomes useful.
Difficulty? (Score:5, Informative)
A decent statistics class isn't any less difficult than an algebra class.
Re:Difficulty? (Score:5, Insightful)
More to the point, how on Earth are people going to be able to do statistics without a good grasp of algebra?
Re:Difficulty? (Score:5, Insightful)
Forget algebra, how can you teach stats to someone with zero exposure to calculus? Probability theory can't be described without limits and infinite summations, i.e. you can't comprehend it without calculus.
Calculus not needed for intro level stats (Score:5, Informative)
Forget algebra, how can you teach stats to someone with zero exposure to calculus?
You can do a basic stats class for people who haven't had calculus. I know because I have taught and tutored people in stats who haven't had calculus. You will find very few stats classes that will require you to actually have a deep understanding of calculus. Sure, if you do know calc you can go deeper into stats but it isn't vital to start with. You can teach Bayes theorem, conditional probability, and lots more without ever doing a derivative or integral. I made my living doing statistical simulations and none of it required me to actually do any calculus to get useful answers.
Probability theory can't be described without limits and infinite summations, i.e. you can't comprehend it without calculus.
Not true, at least at the introductory level. Most people can understand a bell curve just fine without ever having taken a calculus class. Just because they can't derive the formula for the curve doesn't mean they can't understand the concept it represents. It's no different than intro physics in that regard. Plenty of people take intro physics prior to or concurrently with calculus. It's when you want to go deeper that you might need to understand some calculus but most people will never get there.
Re:Difficulty? (Score:5, Interesting)
It sounds like they only want to replace the higher level algebra stuff, so the base would still be there as a necessary foundation for studying statistics.
This sounds like a great idea. Statistics are regularly, routinely abused to mislead people. As a life skill for the general population, statistics is going to be much more useful than advanced algebra or calculus.
Re:Difficulty? (Score:5, Interesting)
According to the description, he's advocating scrapping the teaching of logarithms. Will the kids be taught that everything has a rectangular distribution?
Re:Difficulty? (Score:5, Insightful)
He suggests dropping Algebra II as a requirement. The first two statistics courses I took in college had only Algebra I as a prerequisite. This wasn't "statistics for poets," either, they were the same courses taken by math majors.
Re:Difficulty? (Score:5, Interesting)
He suggests dropping Algebra II as a requirement. The first two statistics courses I took in college had only Algebra I as a prerequisite.
As someone who actually taught Algebra II in high school (years ago), and who taught it one year in a lower-class mostly minority school district, I'll offer a few observations:
(1) I think a stats course would be a great alternative for many students compared to a second year of algebra.
(2) Algebra II was in fact a barrier for many students. There was a high rate of students failing and dropping the course. (At that time, in the state I was teaching, it wasn't strictly required for graduation -- but it was strongly recommended.)
(3) However, the problems with algebra II often start with teaching in algebra I. The algebra I and "pre-algebra" classes tend to be the "dumping ground" in many school districts for less qualified teachers. Teachers with real math degrees often were required to take stuff a lot more complicated than high school, and they often find it barely interesting to teach calculus or pre-calculus. So, in most places the qualified teachers who understand math often teach those upper-level courses, and the random coaches and people who barely passed the math certification test end up teaching algebra I. (There are serious teacher shortages in many places in the US, particularly for secondary math and science.)
(4) As an algebra II teacher, I was confronted with many students who had had a substitute teacher in algebra I for a large portion of the year. The district simply couldn't find qualified teachers to fill those classrooms. The students knew nothing. The previous algebra II teacher (a really smart woman) quit in the middle of the year, because she recognized this and wanted to either (a) send the students back to algebra I since they shouldn't have passed in the first place or (b) require many of the students to come in for mandatory tutoring outside of school hours. She wanted to help the students and was willing to take her own personal time to fix this problem. But the administration said neither was possible under state law, since the students already "had credit" for algebra I. After fighting the battle for a while, she quit.
(5) In many states, algebra teachers are forced to make stupid curriculum choices due to state-mandated curricula. I haven't looked at the new Common Core approaches and what they require, but I can tell you from my experience that we often were required to spend a ridiculous time on stuff that might have been useful for scientists and engineers headed for college in the 1950s, but these skills were much less relevant with modern calculators and computers.
(6) In general, most state curricula have tended to emphasize symbolic manipulation over real-world application (which often comes with true understanding). I was forced to spend many weeks going over how to put conic section equations into standard form, but there was nothing in state guidelines asking teachers to spend time on much more relevant real-life stuff, like applications of basic exponential equations to calculating loan terms or mortgages, investments, etc. When at some point I realized that only 2 of the 140 students I was teaching that year knew what the term "compound interest" meant, I actually abandoned the state standards for a couple weeks because I thought it was my moral responsibility to teach these kids some actual skills that could be useful in personal finance -- this would likely be the last class that many of them would ever take in their lives.
(7) Given the poor teaching and introduction to basic abstractions like variables that students receive in pre-algebra and algebra I in many schools, the only way to "teach algebra II" is learning stupid abstract algorithms for symbolic manipulation, which are generally forgotten a few weeks later. The understanding of basic algebra is often so poor that you really can't teach algebra II on a deep level
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I don't see how changing to stats would change this substantially.
It won't. In fact the main point of my post is that a shift to stats won't make things better, unless we fix other things. I didn't really get around to explaining why I think stats would be a good alternative class to offer for SOME high school students rather than algebra II, which is a separate issue. (Basically, there I agree with many other posts here that some intuitive understanding of statistics is really important to make sense of any real-world data, which people are more likely to encounter on
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Re:Difficulty? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Difficulty? (Score:5, Insightful)
AFAICS, most people who think they understand statistics don't. What they understand is how to apply some rote rules to data that all too often shouldn't have those particular rules used on it. If we're going teach anything in that domain a survey of probability would likely be a lot more useful.
It's been half a century and perhaps I misremember, but I think a course built around Darrell Huff's "How To Lie With Statistics" might be a lot more useful to most High School Students than a standard mathematical treatment. And it'd certainly be a lot less mind-numbing.
Re:Difficulty? (Score:5, Interesting)
AFAICS, most people who think they understand statistics don't. What they understand is how to apply some rote rules to data that all too often shouldn't have those particular rules used on it.
This is undoubtedly true. I can completely get behind the author's notion that more people need to understand statistics. When I was in basic bio-medical research it was appalling how often statistics were not properly applied. Mostly it was "run a student T test and look for P values of .05 or less" with no further analysis. It was not at all uncommon to do a paper at journal club that had serious problems with their data, but had nice looking numbers supporting statistical significance.
I include myself, of course. I had enough statistics to know how to apply the formulas and to spot some basic issues, but until I collaborated with a real PhD statistician I had no idea just how bad it was. She basically showed me that I had no idea what I was doing, even though I was following the industry standard protocols. And she showed me just how awful the statistics were in most of the work I was reading. At least I think she did. I don't know. Most of what she was talking about I had to take on faith..... because, you know.... my knowledge of statistics isn't that advanced.
As long as.... (Score:5, Insightful)
I will agree to this as long as they remove foreign language requirement for engineers! The accountants and poets don't like high end math, I don't like foreign language requirement (and I am fluent in more then 1 language and an engineer)!
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Might as well ban local language. Just code!
Re:As long as.... (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem is the focus on grades, which is preventing us from learning.
I had an argument a while back about this. ...
Me: College Requirements for graduation should have more Advanced Math classes, as Math teaches you valuable problem solving skills.
Education Major: Not everyone is good at Math, so they shouldn't be forced to take the classes and hurt their GPA
Me: Well I am not good at English classes and they are hurting my GPA so I shouldn't have to take them?
Education Major: No you need to take these classes, They offer valuable skills for understanding people and society.
Me: But Math offers valuable problem solving skills.
Education Major: But not everyone is good at Math.
The problem is with our grading system, we reward people who already know the answers, and not on what is learned. For Liberal Arts, you many can BS their way a good grade on a paper. Approaches include a war of attrition where you give so much words that it is impossible for the grader to really grade correctly. Play to the graders ideology You can twist the topic around to support what ever cause the grader feels strongly at. It is difficult to BS in math. If the answer is correct or not, that is where the hatred of math is.
Math isn't about working hard, it is more about doing it right. So people make mistakes and they can't make it up by just doing more. So they feel like they suck at math because where they may be an A+ student they get Cs in Math. Because Math Grading is normally very mechanical.
However from my experience classes I got a C in are the classes I have learned the most in, the ones I got in A in was because it covered topics I already knew a lot about.
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Most colleges require you have foreign language credit that you either took in high school or you take it while in college.
So you can get a BS Eng without taking foreign language in college as long as you took it in high school.
Re:As long as.... (Score:5, Interesting)
The amount of a language you'd learn in a single class, or even taking a single course every year in high school isn't enough to get you be fluent, or even passable in a second language. There are millions of Canadians as hard data that show you can put students in plenty of classes in a second language without actually learning anything. Unless you have an immersion program where people are forced to use the language, then people aren't going to learn the language at all.
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Re: As long as.... (Score:3)
Same goes for all other skills (Score:5, Insightful)
There are plenty of good arguments to be made for moving the math curiculum to statistics, combinatorics and other areas, but "making more people pass the exam" isn't one of them.
Re:Same goes for all other skills (Score:4, Insightful)
There are plenty of good arguments to be made for moving the math curiculum to statistics, combinatorics and other areas, but "making more people pass the exam" isn't one of them.
It is if your job is to "improve education."
Re:Same goes for all other skills (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Same goes for all other skills (Score:4, Insightful)
Up to a certain age, I'd say education is about giving kids a good all-round level of knowledge.
If it turned out that in my Perfect Education System, the class requiring students to learn to juggle 19 balls was causing a lot of people to drop out, I might reflect on whether it's really a necessary skill for most people. That seems to be the spirit of the story.
On a related matter, I do often reflect how much more useful it would have been for me to learn to cook, tile, plumb, repair electricals, etc. Sure, I can learn all that now as an adult, but equally I could read up on the Tudors or plate tectonics now if I really wanted to.
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Why is it a bad thing that more people can get a college degree?
Because the bachelors degree of today, is already the equivalent of a H.S. diploma from forty years ago. Do we really want to shift that up to a Master's?
Logic? (Score:5, Interesting)
How about a course in logic, particularly Boolean logic? I agree, very few people really need to understand logarithms or even polynomials. But learning how to think, and solve problems is important.
Re:Logic? (Score:4, Interesting)
We used to have a 3-year state-designed mixed course, where I (9th grade, usually) was mostly algebra, II was mostly geometry and III was mostly trig - but there was other stuff thrown in and the beginning of II was a unit on Boolean logic.
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Are you from the State of New York? I remember that curriculum, and the books (Integrated Mathematics I, II, and III--the red, blue, and green books) that went along with it. I actually enjoyed that particular path, and thought they were great books--I actually still have copies of them somewhere, and I'm a bit disheartened that you say "used to." On the other hand, I also remember hearing recently that the New York Board of Education is working on seriously devaluing the regents diploma as a means of bo
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How about a course in logic, particularly Boolean logic? I agree, very few people really need to understand logarithms or even polynomials. But learning how to think, and solve problems is important.
My favorite high school class was geometry, and not because I ever had any great need to measure the elements of circles, lines and polygons. What I took to was the idea of formal proof, and what I didn't know at the time was that it was pointing me to a career in software development, a field whose very existence very few people were aware of at the time.
Re:Logic? (Score:5, Interesting)
I did the International Baccalaureate (a European curriculum for high schoolers), in which you got to choose the subjects you wanted to study, within some constraints. However, there was one mandatory class called Theory of Knowledge. This was a combination of logic, ethics and philosophy, and was by far the most interesting class I ever took at school.
Re:Logic? (Score:4, Insightful)
> But learning how to think, and solve problems is important.
Concur 100% as does Paul Lockhart's A Mathematician's Lament [maa.org] agree with you: (I've included an exert)
I bet they will end up using a spreadsheet (Score:4, Insightful)
Math doesn't suck, you do (Score:5, Funny)
http://thebestpageintheuniverse.net/c.cgi?u=math
Okay, so it makes some Americans feel bad... (Score:5, Insightful)
Okay, say we do drop Algebra and higher from the common curriculum. Then we're going to go even lower in the list of math rankings by country [businessinsider.com]. Perhaps it's because of the way it's taught, not because of the material. I distinctly remember hating word problems because they were always so inane. "If the flag pole is 10 feet tall and the sun is at a 30 degree angle, how long is the shadow?". I also remember having the teacher assign 50 problems in one night (2 through 100, evens only since the answers to odds were in the back of the book). Now, with this common core nonsense (no idiot left behind), we are just cramming more of this crap down kids throats.
What was lacking for me was the true application. I hated math growing up, and ended up being an engineer. It wasn't until I started to realize the cool things I could do that required math, such as tinkering in OpenGL, that I really started to latch on to it.
I'm curious, how is it taught in other countries that routinely get higher rankings in math/science? Is it a matter of teaching? a matter of culture? How do the Japanese view math? The Germans? Chinese?
Re:Okay, so it makes some Americans feel bad... (Score:5, Insightful)
distinctly remember hating word problems because they were always so inane. "If the flag pole is 10 feet tall and the sun is at a 30 degree angle, how long is the shadow?"
Those are the best kind of problems, because they test understanding. Using those instead of rote formulas is what other countries do and is one reason why they score so well.
In your example case, it's not about whether you use the "right" formula, but whether you apply your knowledge to get a correct answer.
The thought process could go something like:
The flag pole, ground shadow and line from the end of the ground shadow to the top of the pole forms a triangle. The pole is 10', and the angle at the end of the shadow is 30 degrees.
sine(30) is 0.5[*], so the flag pole height is half of the hypotenuse (distance between end of shadow and top of pole). So the hypotenuse is 20'. The cosine of 30 degrees is about 0.866[*], so the ground shadow will be about 0.866 times 20, or about 17.3'
(Or alternatively, if not remembering what a cosine is, deduce that the opposite angle must be 60 degrees, and use sine(60) instead)
Then the litmus test - does the answer seem reasonable? 30 degrees is the sun being rather low, so shadows are long. It seems reasonable that the shadow is almost twice as long as the height of the pole.
No x, y, z needed. By all means, use them, but you should be able to calculate stuff like this in your head, at least to get an approximate answer.
That's where we fail - our students memorize, they don't *understand*, so they can't apply the knowledge to real life. So you end up with ramps that are too steep for a wheelchair, or extend into the street, because someone didn't understand simple trig.
[*] At least the 30/45/60 degree sines should be memorized, because they crop up so often. Much like pi and the square root of two, knowing the first couple of decimals comes in very handy. But even if you don't, there are sine tables, slide rules, calculators and computers.
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If you think there are reasonable assumptions, write them down in the answer.
If you don't think they are reasonable assumptions, like, for instance, you don't think it's reasonable to assume that the ground is flat, then write that down too, and provide as many answers as you can for those situations.
If you can't determine what would be reasonable assumptions, you aren't ready for the classes you're taking.
In this case, it should lead to extra points for stating something like:
Assumptions:
This is a flag pol
Re:Okay, so it makes some Americans feel bad... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Okay, so it makes some Americans feel bad... (Score:5, Interesting)
You're going to have to do a lot of convincing to get anyone to believe that people do math because they enjoy it.
Indeed, the idea of maths has become so perverted that people don't even seem to believe that it is an enjoyable activity in its own right. It's so far perverted that despite a rich history of people doing maths for curiosity and fun, you still find it unbelievable even though evidence abounds.
Maths for its own sake dates back to the Babylonians, who pretty much invented maths.
Math is a means to an enjoyable end.
It is, and always has been also an enjoyable end in itself. Here are some quotes by Hardy:
"A mathematician, like a painter or poet, is a maker of patterns. If his patterns are more permanent than theirs, it is because they are made with ideas."
"I am interested in mathematics only as a creative art."
"The mathematician's patterns, like the painter's or the poet's must be beautiful; the ideas, like the colours or the words must fit together in a harmonious way. Beauty is the first test: there is no permanent place in this world for ugly mathematics."
Robert Heinlein said it best... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Robert Heinlein said it best... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Robert Heinlein said it best... (Score:4, Funny)
If you can't set up a differential equation in 3d, you wasted the math classes you did take.
Everything else is prep for that.
Everything can be described as a differential equation, even if you don't know all the terms.
Re:Robert Heinlein said it best... (Score:4, Insightful)
Your understanding of daily life is no doubt better, though. You understand, probably intuitively, how things relate to one another better than you would without having been walked through these windows on the world.
I won't go as far as the offered snippet does, but I am pretty confident that the more math you know, the more likely you are to gain an improved understanding of the world around you. I think that's entirely a good thing.
Same thing for the scientific method. I'm not too worried about how much data you know about any one area of scientific endeavor, but if you actually have been taught and have understood the scientific method, the world is much more of an open book to you -- because you then have an open window on objective reality. You can draw the appropriate distinction between a baseless assertion and experimentally validated results; you're a lot less likely to be taken in by various scams, religions, and superstitions.
Same thing for history. It isn't about preparing to repeat the battle of Hastings. It is about developing an overview of human nature. If you have a good overview, you can be more effective for yourself, for your family, as a positive force within your society, etc. If you don't, as the old saw says, you're probably going to just be repeating mistakes, or supporting others who are repeating mistakes.
Learning isn't just about collecting facts and learning procedures. It's about building a big picture that actually represents the world you live in. The closer you can get to that, the more effective you can be, the more your choices can actually bring you closer to your goals, the better you get at winnowing the wheat from the chaff at every level.
Finally, learning does not have to come from schooling. You can pursue it yourself. The autodidact can easily become better informed than the person who has been through a rote process designed to fit the average student. Most people aren't really comfortable in that role, but for those who are, the world can be a truly open book.
School isn't job training (Score:5, Insightful)
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School is both and anyone who tells you otherwise is selling something.
The problem is knowing when it changes. You initial schooling is gets you the broad range of knowledge and expands your mind so you can hopefully function better in society no matter what you do. At some point in time, school stops being about broadening your mind and becomes job training.
So you have to know what school is being used for and when. Sometime in the high school time frame it when it starts transitioning into job training
Re:School isn't job training (Score:5, Insightful)
Granted, modern education is too expensive to devote solely to mind broadening educational pursuit for its own sake (for most).
I agree one hundred percent. And I would ask "Why is it so expensive?". The professors I know don't make all that much money. Yes, the facilities are costly, and so are up-to-date equipment, books, etc. But it still seems to me that higher education costs MUCH more than the mere cost of keeping the institutions running.
However, that is begging the question of the purpose of education all over again. Its only a "waste of time" because the cost has skyrocketed, and that is because it is being sold as an "investment" in future income.
Yes. And instead of being viewed as an investment in future income, it should be viewed as an investment in future society, and therefore should be more heavily subsidized by society. Perhaps in return for that societal investment, students fresh out of college of university could spend a year or two 'giving back' in some capacity that would both extend their education and ease their transition into real-world paying jobs.
The problem is that job-training focused education actually de-values education generally by de-emphasizing exploration and discovery and stampeding students from one supposedly lucrative field to the next.
This probably is the result of our skewed aspirational values. We either conflate 'standard of living' and 'quality of life', or we judge the former to be somehow superior and more desirable. I think the increasing corporatization of society, (and of education), is largely to blame for these attitudes.
Re:School isn't job training (Score:4, Informative)
"Poli". Not "poly". Short for "political science". Not "many sciences".
No one needs algebra... (Score:5, Insightful)
Nobody needs algebra. There are plenty of jobs at McDonald's and algebra is just a waste.
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Needed (Score:2)
"We are really destroying a tremendous amount of talentâ"people who could be talented in sports writing or being an emergency medical technician, but can't even get a community college degree," says Hacker. "I regard this math requirement as highly irrational."
I would prefer EMTs to be able to think mathematically, and be able to extrapolate in the head whether it's safe to administer emergency medication based on prior intake, or whether emergency evacuation is needed, or a boatload of other stuff that depends on understanding maths beyond adding numbers.
Sports writing? Similar. You should at least be familiar with statistics, and how asymptotes work. But I'm not as fired up about those being math-stupid as an EMT being so.
Stop passing on the hate (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Stop passing on the hate (Score:4, Interesting)
I guess like one of the central themes of Tom Sawyer, if you are told something is hard work, it will be. Conversely, if you're told it's fun, that also rings true. For instance, most games these days are endless grinds sold as fun and we pay for the novelty of getting another chore in life. I actually hate most games until I buckle down and try to make the grind fun. What in the world is wrong with me?
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The only reason Math is hard is because if you don't grasp the early concepts, you'll be forever lost in the advanced ones.
If you want the kiddos to do well in Math, you need to make sure they understand the basics early on. Put the effort it early, and the rest will fall into place
much more easily.
While we're at it... (Score:5, Insightful)
.
Why even bother having school at all. It would be a lot easier to just play throughout your childhood.
A view I've held for long time (Score:3)
Apart from algebra being an intellectual hurdle to be jumped which may help separate people academically I have thought this for about the last 30 years, and no I didn't "flunk" maths. As a matter of course we don't teach people medicine or geology or Latin, these are specialisms which people with an interest study as they refine their possible future choices. So why algebra? I am an engineer in an advanced engineering company writing engineering software and I "do maths" about once a year at most. Yes there are people here who do a lot more than me but there are also people who do a lot less so why does the average Joe need to know about quadratic equations?
The suggestion to study statistics seems very sensible, it might help people understand when the politicians are lying...
When I picture theend result of this... (Score:4, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I see the argument, but its deeper than just ma (Score:5, Interesting)
Very well said. There is a tremendous bias against jobs that involve working with your hands and far too many people are encouraged to "go to college" in order to obtain some apocryphal "white collar" career. I would say that a lot of the IT problems many companies have originate with this blue collar bias, with the belief that IT employees are somehow not quite white collar.
I had a conversation with the maintenance supervisor at a client who told me about his son. In the top 10% of his class in high school, he told the school counselor he didn't want to go to college. The counselor requested a meeting with his dad and basically beat him up for not making him go to college (the kid ended up getting some kind of 2 year drafting education, and works for a kitchen equipment maker travelling to job sites to review kitchen construction plans to make sure the planned designs and installations will work -- the guy said he makes close to 100k).
As far as I can tell, all the "go to college" rhetoric has done is build college administration empires, make oodles of money for the student loan industry and probably dumb down traditional academic courses that vocationally-minded students have no interest in.
And what's the end game, exactly? $100k in a debt so you can make coffee? We've flooded the market with half-educated college graduates aspiring to a mythical middle class lifestyle that's becoming increasingly unobtainable even by well educated graduates.
One thing that kind of counts against a lot of skilled trades is the abysmal, old-school hostile management-labor relationship. I worked closely with journeyman electricians as my last job and while the benefits they had seemed great, the work environment seemed really unpleasant. Draconian, authoritarian management schemes, forced overtime and work rules that make a $20k a year cubical job seem pleasant.
Everyone's a winner if the plank is low enough (Score:4, Insightful)
Idiocracy was not meant to be a documentary, nor a roadmap for the future.
Solving the problem by ignoring the results. (Score:4, Insightful)
You don't solve a problem by simply ignoring the results or breaking the measuring tool.
Basic algebra, trigonometry and calculus are not difficult. If the students can't handle it, they are dumb, even if that doesn't please you. End of the story.
They are dumb, and that's a problem. You're not going to solve the problem by bending reality and saying basic abstract maths are difficult and that they are not dumb. You are just ignoring the problem, which may (will) have unintended consequences in the future. Actually, if you want to solve the problem, you should invest more energy in the process that is failing. That could be more hours, less student per teacher, or researching a new pedagogy that makes the acquisition of such simple and fundamental concepts more successful. Or anything else that doesn't imply lowering the expected outcome.
It has nothing to do with the jobs they will do in 30 years, simply because nobody can predict that. You are just promoting the race to the bottom.
Re:Solving the problem by ignoring the results. (Score:4, Interesting)
Basic algebra, trigonometry and calculus are not difficult. If the students can't handle it, they are dumb, even if that doesn't please you. End of the story.
Not difficult for YOU, you mean.
I love math, and I always aced math classes. I LOVED differential equations in college. I tried to transfer my love of math and science to my children. Two children who are good at math, and they were valedictorians. Another is a high school English teacher. :) I have a fourth child who tested as gifted, but she has extreme difficulty with math at the level of Algebra I and beyond. She repeated Agebra I three times in high school; I finally had to get a variance from the state just so she could graduate. She has taken College Algebra three times and done poorly at it, despite tutoring. She does poorly at foreign languages, failing both Spanish and German. However, she does well in her other classes -- top of the class in other subjects.
So, she's not dumb, but she has some kind of learning disability in math and language. Perhaps some kind of a trade school that specializes in her talents would have been a better option -- but the career she is shooting for demands a college degree, so she perseveres.
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Basic algebra, trigonometry and calculus are not difficult. If the students can't handle it, they are dumb, even if that doesn't please you. End of the story
Depends on how bad the teaching is.
I used to think like you. Then I agreed to tutor a friend's kid as a favour (I was staying as a guest at her house for over 2 weeks). The kid was not dumb, but not clearly one of the mathematically gifted sorts who just figures out the system (no matter how badly it's explained), so in other words, normal.
The quality o
advanced mathematics requirements, like algebra .. (Score:3)
advanced mathematics requirements, like algebra, trigonometry and calculus
That is not advanced mathematics.
That is just about basic mathematics.
However, the curriculum needs to be revised with modern tools. Computer algebra systems makes a lot of what is taught in these courses obsolete. Courses that use CAS then start pulling in advanced content to fill up the time.
This is analogous to what the calculator did. Nobody knows how to even calculate a square root by hand (ok a few people) and nobody does long division. There are so many things in math classes that simply need to just go away like long division.
Central limit theorem (Score:2)
Can confirm (Score:2)
I do EE work and barely touch algebra.
Getting X alone in the corner (Score:2)
Algebra is easy.. it's all about getting X alone in the corner, so you can find his value. Geometry should go, along with the foreign language requirement.
Brain formation (Score:3)
Maybe the problem.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Maybe the problem is with how it is taught? Back in the day, high school math teachers tended to have a degree in mathematics (and biology in biology and chemistry in chemistry, etc.). Then in the 1970s this notion of certifying teachers came into being. With certification you were taught many things, like classroom management, child psychology, etc., but no longer was being a math or science teacher based on a demonstrated knowledge of the subject matter.
For anecdotal evidence, I had an excellent organic chemistry teacher in high school. When my state passed new teacher certification rules, she was grandfathered in (or would that be grandmothered?). She often quipped that since she didn't have a certificate, it made no sense that she could teach us as freshman in college, but not seniors in high school. BTW, she finished her dissertation the year after I graduated and continued teaching in high school, without a certificate for an additional 20 years.
Anecdote #2. I have a very good friend who is now a retired teacher. Math was her worst subject. However, the school system needed somebody to teach junior high math and she had a teaching certificate, so that is what she was hired to do. She would often say how grateful she was for the instructor's guide for the lesson plans, because without it she would be lost.
In short, if you want kids to learn math and science, they need teachers that know math and science. My wife is a teacher, so I type this with some trepidation, but maybe instead of dumbing down the subject matter taught to students, we should quit dumbing down the requirements to teach them in the first place. If you want kids to learn, then need teachers who have mastered the subject matter.
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Close -- as far as I know (and I research this), high school teachers in most states still need a specialized bachelor's degree in math education, plus the general teaching certification.
The undeniable problem is that teachers at the elementary-school level definitely don't need any such skill, and in fact are perennially the weakest and most hateful about math of our entire college-going population [madmath.com]. Then they teach broken math to our children from K-6 and in many cases there's no recovery after that. I agr
Lots of good comments... (Score:3)
I was going to use my mod points, but there are too many good comments (and plenty of modders anyway).
However, one point no one seems to have made yet: TFA seems to worry that, without Alg2, you won't get a college degree, and the world will be denied the next talented sports writer or EMT.
To me, a better question is: Why in the world would you expect a sports writer or an EMT to have a college degree? Those are both fields that require a certain amount of training, but a college degree seems to be the wrong kind. What is it with the US (this is very US oriented), that everyone is expected to go to college? The simple fact is that most people don't (or shouldn't) need a college degree for their careers. And by forcing everyone to go, you only water down the contents of a college education, so that everyone can pass.
Also: I agree with the Ms. Goldstein's husband: you require high school students to do math for the same reason you require them to read Shakespeare. High school is a generalist education that should expose students to an essential broad cross section of academic and cultural studies.
Finally, Ms. Goldstein hits on a key problem with math education in the USA: "American teachers, especially those in the elementary grades, have taken few math courses themselves, and often actively dislike the subject." Might just make it hard to learn...
Statistics instead of Algebra (Score:3)
f(x)=ae^-( ((x-b)^2) / 2c^2)
The Language God Talks (Score:3)
A quote from the book with the same name, both in print and in audio, by Herman Wouk about his conversations with Feynman while doing research for his two volume magnum opus on WWII. According to Feynman the language is Calculus
Everyone blames the Philosophers... (Score:3)
"But it's not easy to see why potential poets and philosophers face a lofty mathematics bar. "
I was a Philosophy major in college and I did Calculus... I do agree that I hardly use more than basic algebra. Perhaps a real life math class and statistics are more useful. I find doing stuff like figuring out a mortgage and 'how long will it take me to pay off my credit card' is pretty useful.
Who is "mandating" math? (Score:3)
In any case, by definition, competitive colleges have "barriers" to entry, and requiring all their students to know basic math and science (and that's what algebra and calculus are) is a reasonable barrier for them to have. If anything, colleges should be requiring more science and math literacy, not less.
If we were honest (Score:3)
Because 99% of them are fucked already.
Re: Burn those algebras ladies (Score:3, Insightful)
The reasoning is kind of weird. Even at the college level, statistics is extremely abstract. Statistics did not start making sense until I took it as part of my masters degree. The same is true about almost everyone I know. What you learn in the bachelor's level course is just theory, with no partial applications. What is the Poisson distribution for? When to use the Xi-squared curve?
It's not until you get into more advanced statistics classes that things start to come together, which is the same situation
Re: Burn those algebras ladies (Score:5, Insightful)
I actually found this funny (Score:5, Insightful)
If imposing math reduces the number of philosophers, sports figures, and poets... I unconditionally support us becoming a lot more focused on adding math requirements.
Sadly, I don't think it will do anything of the kind.
But it was still amusing to read. :)
Re:I actually found this funny (Score:5, Interesting)
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That is what is known as a "contradiction in terms."
Re:I actually found this funny (Score:5, Interesting)
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but rather a combination of critical thinking courses and civics
That is a great idea but churches would see that as being worse than teaching evolution. And then have some consideration for the poor politicians... how on earth could they mislead an electorate versed in critical thinking.
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It is quite possible to teach stats on high school level. Stats is at basic level quite easy and useful knowledge to all: how to deal with a big heap of numbers. Summarize them to a couple of numbers which indicate how spread out they are around different kinds of central numbers. Use the numbers to make some predictions. Some combinatorics and probabilities. Have an idea what the numbers reported in the
Re:I actually found this funny (Score:4, Insightful)
We covered probability, statistics, formal logic, set theory... it was absolutely glorious. And almost none of it really needed anything beyond Algebra I and an inquisitive mind. My mom called me once when I was in college and asked how to take a square root in a spreadsheet... and I asked "ah, finding standard deviations, are we?" Instant "how-the-hell-did-you-know-that" moment. Probably the best class I have ever taken at any level of education. Made doing all of those things in college a thousand times simpler because I already knew the basics and didn't have to climb a big learning curve.
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"I actually found this funny"
Funny in a very sad way.
So... our solution to increasing drop out rates is to make the curriculum simpler? Idiocy! (That should be pronounced 'Idiocracy') Its true that I'm not calculating trajectories or finding the surface area of unusual shaped solids defined by funky formulas -- most of that knowledge has been lost to me over the years. I've retained maybe 1/3 of my leet-math-skills(tm). If all we teach is basic algebra and some statistics and there is a SIMILAR loss
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This is also why many people live with crushing debt. They had little -- or no -- understanding of how interest works.
A little math, a few curves... intuitive understanding of those things should lead any thinking person to run screaming from interest-bearing debt.
In general, those of us who did understand it before lenders managed to get their hooks into us are capable of, and many are, living completely different lives from those who didn't.
Math. It's the "big hammer."
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Re:I actually found this funny (Score:5, Insightful)
"Few people realize that the % symbol indicates an exponential function."
It does not. The % symbol indicates that the number preceding it is the numerator of a fraction whose denominator is 100.
Percentages are often used in situations involving compound interest, which IS an exponential function with time,
but that's not what the % symbol represents.
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As a person with a philosophy degre, I feel professionally obliged to remind you that all mathematics and science...in effect all of human progress...are simply branches of philosophy which eventually became specialized enough and developed enough axioms to seperate themselves. Science was once known as natural philosphy, Turing's "Computing Machinery and Intelligence" whcih essentially defined the computer is a pure philisophical work and Bertrand Russel is dually one of the great mathematicians and philos
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What gets me is this:
It's not hard to understand why Caltech and M.I.T. want everyone to be proficient in mathematics. But it's not easy to see why potential poets and philosophers face a lofty mathematics bar. Demanding algebra across the board actually skews a student body, not necessarily for the better."
Err... We educate to a certain standard because of societal needs. We, as a society, do not need (nor can we afford) more poets and philosophers. They're both noble and worthy things and great to have but you should probably have a day job. Unless, of course, you're going to be a "Philosopher of Mathematics."
Having said that, I'm sort of inclined to agree with the guy. The average person will never need Algebra II. They might need Algebra I and I think that's a fine point to stop - as m
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It's not necessary to make all school math 'practical' but to explain it in terms that are observable in the world around us. Poisson distributions ('bell curves") are all around us if we care to look. And before getting bogged down in the fine points of l'Hôpital's Rule, explain derivatives as the rates of change that we see around us (resting object, moving object, falling object...).
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I would tend to agree with you here. While I do completely agree with removing those courses as hard requirements for all of the described reasons - particularly calculus...maybe not algebra 2 and trig...replacing one kind of complex math course with another semi-hard to graph math course that many people won't use isn't going to help much.
IMO - right idea, wrong solution. Replace that course with an intense personal finance class...that seems more like applied math that should be required.
Re: Burn those algebras ladies (Score:3)
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True. I, by nature, am more into philosophy than math. Interesting I loved logic; and from logic I got into programming; and from programming I picked up math.
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This guy is a political scientist I don't think he knows how much math is really used or in what fields. I would hate to think a Doctor or EMT wouldn't know how to figure out how much of a medication they could give over an amount of time vs body weight.
Re: I agree.. (Score:4, Insightful)