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Old 04-28-2010, 04:27 PM   #1
AENeuman
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Do kids really need math beyond algebra?

I think the teaching, content and assessment of math is so far behind the technology available and needed that it would be more beneficial to reduce the high school graduation math requirement to Algebra I (a class that is often taken in 8th grade).

The main benefit of math (and most subjects for that matter) is not the specific content learned, but rather it's learning to learn in a different critical way. I think students can learn the critical thinking skills they would learn from math today in a much more efficient, engaging and successful way; primarily through the use of technology. for example it is much more beneficial to know how to use excel than it is to know how to balance a check book by hand.

Much like students take an intro of biology, chemistry, American literature, wood shop, etc, math should also be approached as an introduction to the field of mathematics. If a student is interested in the subject, they can take more.

We are still trying to teach the style of math that was created in response to sputnik. however, through technology we now have the ability to teach in a far more dynamic, engaging and macro scope.

I think for the vast majority of people (in non-math related fields) in this country having a very good understanding of algebra would provide them with the skills needed to be successful/competent. our technology has created a society where only basic math is required, so why waste the students time teaching them something technology has made obsolete?

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Old 04-28-2010, 04:34 PM   #2
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Who creates the technology to do the math if no one knows how to do the math?
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Old 04-28-2010, 04:38 PM   #3
Alan T
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I don't know how it is these days, but I remember 20 years ago, after Algebra II, we usually had Analysis, Trig and Calculus.

I guess Trig and Calculus could be pretty arguable, but Analysis I really think is necessary and actually very poorly learned from my experience in the work force. In a technical field, I can't begin to explain how much frustration I receive from people not practicing very basic troubleshooting or problem flow analysis such as taught in that basic highschool class.

Everyone now a days in the technical field seem to be about creating scripts for people to follow when doing troubleshooting. That ends up leaving critical out of the box thinking behind. I guess it gives more job security for me, but still bothers me greatly.

So sure, the AP math classes, perhaps could be swapped out with other things I suppose, but I definitely would keep Analysis
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Old 04-28-2010, 04:53 PM   #4
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I guess it gives more job security for me, but still bothers me greatly.


that's my point. much like it is acceptable to be ignorant about our health (alomst no education on this) and rely on doctors to fix us, why can't we embrace our ignorance in math and let you get rich off it? (as we already do to some extent in accounting and using turbo tax to fill out a 1040ez)

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Old 04-28-2010, 05:09 PM   #5
SportsDino
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Yuck, we don't need even stupider sheep in the populace. Excel is a skill that should be taught in a computers class, it isn't math.

Algebra is just the start of people learning how to actually think about math rather than punching buttons on a calculator. Half of the math taught in high school is necessary for basic understanding of chemistry, PHYSICS, and statistics. You might as well cut the curriculum down to reading/writing/history at that point.

Hell, this is the society that thinks everyone needs to go to college, this is impossible with 8th grade level math as the standard leaving high school. We already have a society of the most expensively trained secretaries and coffee shop workers, and we are constantly being passed by on engineering development by other countries.

There is no way cutting back on math is somehow going to improve education. Its just embracing the dumbening of America.

Even more than the mechanical skills, what this really gets to is learning how to think mathematically instead of arithmetically. The process of proofs is why we teach geometry, not because anyone really cares about the circumference of a circle most days. The problem with a lot of people is they can't connect the dots in their thinking, they think all of discourse and intelligence is quoting back the latest groupthink blasted out over the television. We need less frickin zombies and more people who are able to systematically approach problems and solve them.

You want 'deeper algebra'... guess what, that is what most of those classes after algebra 1 are doing. You take the skills learned in algebra, and apply them to real world math problems like geometry and trigonometry to get people some practice, otherwise they don't have the basic intelligence to understand whether the MatLab equation solver they used actually got the right result or not because they typoed the entry.

This is the same as engineers downplaying the liberal arts, they think as long as they can do math that they'll never have need to communicate with someone else, or understand how history and social science help to understand the context and the process of what people are doing all around them. It is just an extension of the 'people are mindless cogs in a giant machine' type of thinking, they put it under the friendly name of 'specialization' but its really just making kids braindead and minimally functional to live the dumb consumer lifestyle.
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Old 04-28-2010, 05:10 PM   #6
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Too many people already don't know basic math.
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Old 04-28-2010, 05:12 PM   #7
Alan T
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Originally Posted by SportsDino View Post

This is the same as engineers downplaying the liberal arts, they think as long as they can do math that they'll never have need to communicate with someone else, or understand how history and social science help to understand the context and the process of what people are doing all around them. It is just an extension of the 'people are mindless cogs in a giant machine' type of thinking, they put it under the friendly name of 'specialization' but its really just making kids braindead and minimally functional to live the dumb consumer lifestyle.


Funny you mention this. I am an engineer, and with spell checkers and grammar checkers so easily available these days I ask myself all of the time why so much grammar or literature is needed. Then I read posts online from random people and can barely understand what they are saying, or attempting to say. I suddenly realize removing those classes would not be too smart.
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Old 04-28-2010, 05:13 PM   #8
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As much as I hate math, I think it's critical that kids learn math beyond algebra.
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Old 04-28-2010, 05:13 PM   #9
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Too many people already don't know basic math.

70% of the board probably agrees with you. The other half disagrees.
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Old 04-28-2010, 05:24 PM   #10
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that's my point. much like it is acceptable to be ignorant about our health (alomst no education on this) and rely on doctors to fix us, why can't we embrace our ignorance in math and let you get rich off it? (as we already do to some extent in accounting and using turbo tax to fill out a 1040ez)

During my schooling there was a mandatory health class, the teacher doing it was a dumbass who just sat around like a piece of lard, but in theory it teaches you basics of nutrition, exercise, etc. We rely on doctors to fix us because it really is a specialty to cut someone with a scalpel and have them actually improve in health. Most of us trying to do that just make a mess...

The idea is learning how to actually solve problems. Necessary for a doctor, an engineer, or a retail worker who wants to actually be a manager some day. Its not the fault of people who have intelligence to explain to the average moron that solving a math problem is much like solving any other problem... the average moron just wants to learn the same as a dog, through repetition and observation, but without understanding.

We need less of those.
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Old 04-28-2010, 05:32 PM   #11
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70% of the board probably agrees with you. The other half disagrees.

LOL! Awesome.
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Old 04-28-2010, 05:37 PM   #12
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the average moron just wants to learn the same as a dog, through repetition and observation, but without understanding. We need less of those.

Somewhere in that snippet I think you said something very useful, but I'm not completely sure how to isolate it properly.

I don't think the problem is actually what the "average moron" wants, the problem actually lies with how close to moron "average" has become.

Moron, under the old definitions no longer in use was "A person of mild mental retardation having a mental age of from 7 to 12 years and generally having communication and social skills enabling some degree of academic or vocational education."
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Old 04-28-2010, 05:40 PM   #13
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70% of the board probably agrees with you. The other half disagrees.

I usually go for that 1 percent. You know, odds are you buy three packs of cards and you get a gold foil card. When you open that last pack you're thinking it's gotta a be this pack, but it isn't. Sometimes no one understands.
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Old 04-28-2010, 06:03 PM   #14
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No offense intended towards people with learning disabilities, I went with moron instead of a dumbfuck, please read it as whatever you find most insulting to the average person, but not insulting to people of the class I unintentionally insulted.

This is where those extra grammar and communication classes would have helped me.

The point was to distinguish between rote learning versus reasoning. In an extreme rote-learning world a person would only understand those things that they have seen before and through repeated personal experience know the answers to any problem that might arise.

A person with reasoning can apply assumptions to situations they have not encountered before and can arrive at the same solutions without exhaustive personal experience. They can also manipulate these sets of assumptions to come up with new assumptions that are logically consistent with the set, so they can project their knowledge to situations that they have not even encountered yet.

Higher math teaches people to think at a level where rote-learning becomes less and less practical. You cannot memorize every possible long division, so you learn the process of dividing the problem into a subset that is solvable. You learn to prove something so you can solve entire classes of problems without having to perform a manual test on all inputs (I deal with problems that are too large to test all possibilities, so if I didn't use mathematical processes to verify my work I'd be out of luck).
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Old 04-28-2010, 06:06 PM   #15
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Yes without question. Whether the methods of teaching it need to change is a completely different question, but it's already taken too far a backseat in favor of high stakes testing and other superfluous things that hamper them later in life.

Start early and often.
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Old 04-28-2010, 06:17 PM   #16
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We need more math. I took one freshman-level trig class in college, and that's the only math I studied that was more advanced than algebra. Look how I turned out.
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Old 04-28-2010, 06:19 PM   #17
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Teach more accounting and money management (not in a pure business sense, but for everyday use) classes.
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Old 04-28-2010, 07:02 PM   #18
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Teach more accounting and money management (not in a pure business sense, but for everyday use) classes.

BIG +1
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Old 04-28-2010, 07:21 PM   #19
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Teach more accounting and money management (not in a pure business sense, but for everyday use) classes.
I agree with this - I'm a big advocate of education however I also think a lot more 'practical' stuff like this should be taught, along with teaching people to break out of the 'employee' mindset and showing them that its possible to setup your own businesses etc.

One of the most influential classes for me at school was home economics (cooking) - we had to buy our own ingredients and were taught to cook, I chose to make things which I knew I could sell to other people at school.

I made more from that lesson than I generally did in pocket money each week; that experience encouraged me to branch out and try things in life which I might not have otherwise ... even outside of my career such experiences gave me the bravery to simply 'try new things' which has lead me into many great experiences including my present home here in Florida.
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Old 04-28-2010, 07:32 PM   #20
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No offense intended towards people with learning disabilities, I went with moron instead of a dumbfuck, please read it as whatever you find most insulting to the average person, but not insulting to people of the class I unintentionally insulted.

FWIW, since I have no idea whether this was clear or not, my comment wasn't meant as critical of your word choice, I added the old definition strictly to help illustrate the point I was trying to make.

Regardless of the terminology used, my point was that I believe you're probably giving credit for too high a percentage of the population being capable of gaining the benefits you described in your follow up post. (i.e. They can also manipulate these sets of assumptions to come up with new assumptions that are logically consistent with the set, etc ... Higher math teaches people to think at a level where rote-learning becomes less and less practical, etc

Oddly enough, I struggled mightily with even HS algebra (personality conflict with teacher mostly) but am actually one of those people who will say without hesitation that I've used it for most of my adult life, not the concepts in some basic way but actual algebra itself.
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Old 04-28-2010, 07:50 PM   #21
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Learning the technology without the math is nearly pointless. I've seen a lot of people who work with Excel all day do a piss-poor job because they don't really understand the math behind what they are trying to figure out. My knowledge of Excel is only mediocre, but I can run circles around these people because I know the math.
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Old 04-28-2010, 07:57 PM   #22
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To answer the original question.


Yes.
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Old 04-28-2010, 08:04 PM   #23
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I think a lot of you are missing the point of the thread. He isn't saying to discourage anyone from pursuing higher math and the sciences he is just saying that it is dumb to require them to go past algebra if they already have no idea of what is going on. I have taught geometry (the course after algebra in our district) and none of the seniors or juniors have any idea of what is going on. The freshmen do and that is why we should encourage them to go forward but why make the seniors keep trying to get that extra credit?

EDIT: And there are a ton of jobs (like it or not it is where this country is at) that require no use of any math beyond algebra.

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Old 04-28-2010, 08:09 PM   #24
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But I thought that everybody had an equal chance to be anything they want when they grow up. Are we willing to close some of those doors for kids in high school? Personally I would be willing to, but many parents wouldn't.
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Old 04-28-2010, 08:10 PM   #25
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EDIT: And there are a ton of jobs (like it or not it is where this country is at) that require no use of any math beyond algebra.


Don't you think that's a big issue?
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Old 04-28-2010, 08:12 PM   #26
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But I thought that everybody had an equal chance to be anything they want when they grow up. Are we willing to close some of those doors for kids in high school? Personally I would be willing to, but many parents wouldn't.

But isn't the parent's problem. They can still sign their kids up for whatever classes they want. Who cares what other people's kids will or won't take? Can't we expect at least that level of interest from parents on their kids education? Enrolling your kids in classes!?!
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Old 04-28-2010, 08:14 PM   #27
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Don't you think that's a big issue?

Sure but the algebra II requirement is not changing that at all. The country is this way with the requirement. Do you really think those kids that got D-'s their third time taking Algebra II are better off than had they taken 3 classes in a discipline other than math?
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Old 04-28-2010, 09:41 PM   #28
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I have taught geometry (the course after algebra in our district) and none of the seniors or juniors have any idea of what is going on.

God bless you. every math teacher i have meet/worked with all said senior geometry is the hardest, most frustrating class to teach.
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Old 04-28-2010, 09:59 PM   #29
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The problem with a lot of people is they can't connect the dots in their thinking, they think all of discourse and intelligence is quoting back the latest groupthink blasted out over the television. We need less frickin zombies and more people who are able to systematically approach problems and solve them.

I think all post should start with this...

we agree that things right now are not good. i purpose a radical change, you want more of the same, just harder (and maybe without cable)
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Old 04-28-2010, 10:20 PM   #30
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I think math is taught poorly in schools these days but it's absolutely necessary. Math is a part of everything and teaches critical thinking and problem solving.
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Old 04-28-2010, 10:58 PM   #31
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For those that talk about how important math is in developing critical thinking, I agree. For those that talk about emphasizing practical application learning, I also agree. And my solution to both is this - we need to start placing a much greater emphasis on teaching probability and statistics. Too many people have really distorted ideas of probability, and it affects their thinking on a scale far beyond just math.

I took all the math classes in High School up through and including calculus. When I got to college, I realized I was not headed in a path that required more advanced math, so I satisfied my "quantitative reasoning" requirement by taking a statistics and probability class, and it was easily the best math related class I've ever had - the implications and resulting knowledge gained from that class have had a far greater impact on my life than trig or calculus.
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Old 04-28-2010, 11:30 PM   #32
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I don't really care how much math we teach, I just want to know if that fucking train cruising at 70mph was able to stop in time.
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Old 04-29-2010, 11:24 AM   #33
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I disagree with any radical change that amounts to 'well lets not do anything beyond the most basic algebra'. If you want to make a standard non-college trade-school track through high school I would be behind that if we pushed as a society for not using degrees as a sledgehammer to people's futures in employment.

We already have the most expensive secretaries in the world (college degrees are common 'preferences' for low paying office drones). I am opposed to anything that involves people delaying learning to college where it is much more expensive to EVERYONE involved (student, school, national funding). Inevitably a bunch of students are going to sign up for this 'easy street' and then change their mind and decide they have to go to college. All you've done is clubbed their knee caps and gave them a bill for thousands of dollars to catch up in the race.

Hell, not everyone can be Jeff Gordon, but you have your way and we'll see even more people who can't keep up with the pace car!

I probably overestimate what people are capable of, I think most people choose and embrace ignorance, rather than being fundamentally weak in the head in some way from birth or upbringing. We need less molly-coddling and laziness, and more people determined and capable to be builders instead of consumers. Anyone who says only a portion of the people need to be the brains is the same person that will keep your salary low the rest of your life and then say when you lose your job 'well if you had any skills and education you wouldn't be in this position'. If life is going to be harsh, at least start early enough that people can prepare for it, instead of being dependent on federal charity.
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Old 04-29-2010, 11:25 AM   #34
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I don't really care how much math we teach, I just want to know if that fucking train cruising at 70mph was able to stop in time.

but what is that is kph?
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Old 04-29-2010, 11:40 AM   #35
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One of the most influential classes for me at school was home economics (cooking) - we had to buy our own ingredients and were taught to cook, I chose to make things which I knew I could sell to other people at school.


...and thus started Marc's short-lived yet highly lucrative 5th grade Meth business.
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Old 04-29-2010, 11:44 AM   #36
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The main benefit of math (and most subjects for that matter) is not the specific content learned, but rather it's learning to learn in a different critical way.

This is not a universally agreed-upon assessment, of course. There are different theories about what the teaching/learning process really seeks to provide to the learner... some combination of information and skills, but that split is not really a matter of consensus.

One thing that seems to be the case (also controversial) is that mathematics is pretty close to a brute force learning area for most people. Many do not exit their math instruction with a set of learning skills or a framework for how to think about things differently -- they instead just emerge with enough things memorized to be able to pass an examination, and then dump the large share of it. So, with the "sheep," what do you truly gain by forcing more math? Are you instilling discipline in study that will pay off in non-mathematical ways? Maybe. Are you teaching a way to think about things that will prove useful later in life? We'd hope so, but perhaps not.

I do think there's an element of moralism here that's not to be trifled with. To at some point just say we don't care whether the great unwashed get exposure to certain academic things (yes, even by sort of forcing it upon them through public policy) really does resonate with me as a pretty evil thing to do. Not that this argument ought to win the day, just seems pretty cold to declare a loss that way.
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Old 04-29-2010, 11:45 AM   #37
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Teach more accounting and money management (not in a pure business sense, but for everyday use) classes.

I fucking agree wholeheartedly.
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Old 04-29-2010, 11:49 AM   #38
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Gotta have Geometry. It is just too useful in life, calculating areas and such.
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Old 04-29-2010, 11:53 AM   #39
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Gotta have Geometry. It is just too useful in life, calculating areas and such.

Of course, I mean, not a day goes by where I don't have to that several times.
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Old 04-29-2010, 12:10 PM   #40
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Of course, I mean, not a day goes by where I don't have to that several times.


Hey, annually for me at least. But it is more satisfying to know how to figure out how long the third leg of a triangle is than to be ignorant of simple facts.
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Old 04-29-2010, 12:17 PM   #41
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Of course, I mean, not a day goes by where I don't have to that several times.

Heck, I do it near daily

It's always fun to get asked "what classes should I take to be a game programmer?" They're expecting answers like C, C++, graphics, and always flip out when I say Calculus, Physics, Data Structures, Algorithms. Everything I do is in 3D, and so understanding vectors, trig, and the like is CRITICAL.

But more on to the topic at hand, I agree with the earlier statement that our society is so focused on the degree and the college education as the way to advancement that the advanced classes are needed. But if we had some different career tracks like bringing back vocational, we could tailor high school education much more directly. Honestly by the time you leave the 8th grade you ought to know how to count money and make change and have the other basic life skills, and 9th or 10th grade ought to start focusing on college prep or vocational or maybe even "office skills" that don't need a degree but do need some other skillsets.
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Old 04-29-2010, 02:08 PM   #42
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Hey, annually for me at least. But it is more satisfying to know how to figure out how long the third leg of a triangle is than to be ignorant of simple facts.

{shrug} I guess I can't really speak to the satisfaction of it since, off hand, I can't say that I've ever needed to figure that out, at least not since HS.

Hindsight being what it is, I can definitely say there were a boatload of things my time would have been better spent learning with the same hours I spent on HS geometry (the aforementioned stats/probability class, which my HS didn't even offer, among them).

While I'm posting anyway, just on the basic theme at hand, I probably ought to say that I'm not a big fan of "offering material just for the sake of offering it" at the expense of teaching skills that can actually be applied in the workplace. I believe we ought to do a better job of assessing students & the likelihood that they will have some practical application for a given niche of a subject, and I agree with those who have cited the notion of (for example) secretaries needing 4 yrs of college as being a part of the current problem.
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Old 04-30-2010, 01:16 PM   #43
OldGiants
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We need to do away with technology in the classroom at the younger levels. Too many children don't know basic arithmetic like the times tables. Often their IEPs (Individual Education Plans) allow them to use calculators or cheat sheets. Yes, you have to memorize the tables, that's the point. No one has enough fingers or the time to count it all out. Memorize.

At the HS level, the math teachers I know all complain that today's kids won't accept that they got a problem wrong.

"But I set it up correctly! Don't I get partial credit?"

"There is a correct answer and you didn't get that, so no."

The issue is that at the HS level, math is concrete and has correct answers. The other wussy subjects allow options to be correct, and kids expect that in math. They (and their parents) grow truculent when a Fascist Math Teacher expects the kid to give the correct answer.

There is nothing sadder (or more frustrating) than to try to complete a purchase at a store where there is a power failure and the check-out clerk has to add up the prices, calculate the tax and make change (since the credit cards won't work).

May as well pay with sheep or pigs.
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Old 04-30-2010, 01:49 PM   #44
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Why on Earth would you want a basic educational standard to be stagnant, or even worse regress, while technology is advancing? If there are verifiable advancements in technology of our society, the education system should make those advancements the minimum standard for education. That's how you'll get more advancement.


That means Algebra I should be taught earlier, not later.

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Old 04-30-2010, 01:59 PM   #45
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Originally Posted by OldGiants View Post
We need to do away with technology in the classroom at the younger levels.

I'd have to disagree, at this point in society something like keyboarding skills are actually more relevant down the road than just about anything past being able to read.
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Old 04-30-2010, 02:01 PM   #46
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Originally Posted by OldGiants View Post
The other wussy subjects allow options to be correct, and kids expect that in math.

That's true. For example, I ask:

What happened on June 6, 1944?
A. A-Day
B. B-Day
C. C-Day
D. D-Day
E. All of the above

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Old 04-30-2010, 02:01 PM   #47
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That means Algebra I should be taught earlier, not later.

At the expense of what?

I'm not arguing your contention necessarily, but realistically there are only so many hours in the day, something has to give somewhere and recess/PE are already gone in a lot of places and lunches are as short as 15 minutes, so at some point you either have to try to go even further mile wide/inch deep or something has to be dropped.
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Old 04-30-2010, 02:03 PM   #48
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Originally Posted by OldGiants View Post
We need to do away with technology in the classroom at the younger levels. Too many children don't know basic arithmetic like the times tables. Often their IEPs (Individual Education Plans) allow them to use calculators or cheat sheets. Yes, you have to memorize the tables, that's the point. No one has enough fingers or the time to count it all out. Memorize.

I'll be taking my 1st grade daughter to Indianapolis late next week for the National Math Bee. This uses a program called "Batter Up!" that is essentially flash cards on the computer disguised as a baseball game. This technology makes it fun for the kids to learn those basic tables. It doesn't remove the need to memorize, but helps improve their ability and desire to learn the skills. They also are doing distance-learning projects with other schools across the country using netbooks and the Internet, plus she has learned what Google is thanks to computers in the classroom.

The key is to use technology to enhance the learning experience and expose them to the tech at a young level so they are comfortable with it. It should never be used to replace those basic skills, that I agree with strongly. As my daughter gets into double-digit addition, she's starting to understand that the early memorization can teach her tricks to solving the more difficult problems, and she's starting to "get" it.
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Old 04-30-2010, 02:06 PM   #49
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At the expense of what?

Nothing? It's more that math moves slowly, and maybe we can compress the math curriculum. Of course I'm someone that blew through 7th grade math, 8th grade math, and partway into 9th grade geometry during my 7th grade years, so I'm a bit biased

I am a huge fan of allowing kids to "work ahead". I had several classes like that growing up and they were all that kept me from being bored.

Or they could teach it in place of all the art and music classes they keep kicking out of schools thanks to budget cuts (reason #325,231,768 that my children are in a private school...)
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Old 04-30-2010, 02:09 PM   #50
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Originally Posted by JonInMiddleGA View Post
At the expense of what?

the 4.5 hours of TV kids watch per day?
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