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The aim would be to treat mathematics as a liberal art, making it as accessible and welcoming as sculpture or ballet.
addams wrote:Politics is hard. I can't do it.
It takes a nasty Jr. High School Girl in a man's body to keep up.
Роберт wrote:The aim would be to treat mathematics as a liberal art, making it as accessible and welcoming as sculpture or ballet.
Why is the author wanting to make math less accessible?
Jahoclave wrote:Also, the idea that we don't need or use algebra is laughable. Solving for x, you do it far more than you think. The problem isn't that we don't need it, but that, at least from the anecdotal experience I've acquired, the U.S. school system sucks at teaching it. I know my biggest problem with maths was that all they would do is keep going through example after example without ever actually teaching the reasoning behind what you were doing. And the text books provided little explanation either, so I couldn't read them to get at something the teacher wasn't providing. I suspect, even if we taught a different set of maths, they'd be taught just as poorly.
Aightynine wrote:Роберт wrote:The aim would be to treat mathematics as a liberal art, making it as accessible and welcoming as sculpture or ballet.
Why is the author wanting to make math less accessible?
XD Ballet is actually a particularly bad example for his argument. I don't know about you, but most people I know don't want to do ballet--particularly not on the level that any "real" ballet instructor would require. (From what I understand, unless you're at a real casual dance studio like I was, learning ballet involves A LOT of rigor from a young age.)
addams wrote:Politics is hard. I can't do it.
It takes a nasty Jr. High School Girl in a man's body to keep up.
Andrew Hacker wrote:Instead of investing so much of our academic energy in a subject that blocks further attainment for much of our population, I propose that we start thinking about alternatives. Thus mathematics teachers at every level could create exciting courses in what I call “citizen statistics.” This would not be a backdoor version of algebra, as in the Advanced Placement syllabus. Nor would it focus on equations used by scholars when they write for one another. Instead, it would familiarize students with the kinds of numbers that describe and delineate our personal and public lives.
It could, for example, teach students how the Consumer Price Index is computed, what is included and how each item in the index is weighted — and include discussion about which items should be included and what weights they should be given.
This need not involve dumbing down. Researching the reliability of numbers can be as demanding as geometry. More and more colleges are requiring courses in “quantitative reasoning.” In fact, we should be starting that in kindergarten.
addams wrote:Torture is Not how to get information.
The way to get information is with Blue Berry Pancakes.
Not really. "Optimal" is really hard, because we don't know nearly enough about the brain, and, importantly, because kids learn different.Magnanimous wrote:One solution is to make an intuitive curriculum, then make it public domain and train teachers for free. (But good luck getting the money.) I don't know exactly what an optimal curriculum would look like, but there's probably enough good teachers(where's Feynman when we need him?) and education researchers in the world to get close.
omgryebread wrote:probably not necessary to teach students set theory or addition in base 6.
frezik wrote:Anti-photons move at the speed of dark
DemonDeluxe wrote:Paying to have laws written that allow you to do what you want, is a lot cheaper than paying off the judge every time you want to get away with something shady.
Thesh wrote:To be honest, you only really need algebrra for higher maths, physics, chemistry, statistics, computer science, biology, engineering, economics, accounting, and other science/business related fields.
Dauric wrote:I don't entirely agree with this but mostly because I think that the way we group mathematical techniques and methods is becoming obsolete. To wit: determining the root of polynomials certainly has limited applications for people outside those fields sure, however the basic algebra lesson of using variables could stand to be taught at lower grades in light of the accessibility of relatively simple scripting languages, including fairly basic spreadsheet use, and as has been mentioned previously some basic understanding of statistics would probably be appropriate in social studies classes.
addams wrote:Torture is Not how to get information.
The way to get information is with Blue Berry Pancakes.
cjmcjmcjmcjm wrote:omgryebread wrote:probably not necessary to teach students set theory or addition in base 6.
That's a very strange view to have.
In seriousness, though, having nostalgia about multiplication tables is holding back education. If you need to use numbers that often anyway, you'll memorize them anyway.
morriswalters wrote:A good carpenter can use slopes, calculate angles, measure and manipulate fractions, and read fairly complex schematics, all without the benefit of Algebra.
In the interest of maintaining rigor, we’re actually depleting our pool of brainpower
In general we look for a new [physics] law by the following process. First we guess it. Then we compute the consequences of the guess to see what would be implied if this law that we guessed is right... It does not make any difference how beautiful your guess is. It does not make any difference how smart you are, who made the guess, or what his name is – if it disagrees with experiment it is wrong.
Obby wrote:morriswalters wrote:A good carpenter can use slopes, calculate angles, measure and manipulate fractions, and read fairly complex schematics, all without the benefit of Algebra.
Just because you don't call it algebra does not magically make it something else.
Thesh wrote:To be honest, you only really need algebrra for higher maths, physics, chemistry, statistics, computer science, biology, engineering, economics, accounting, and other science/business related fields.
morriswalters wrote:Algebra is an abstraction. If you need it then you can't live without it, and if you don't, then try to name a basic skill that it teaches that can't be taught another way. It's a tool set. In and of itself it's valueless. Without it, any other math you take, wouldn't make sense, not to mention science. But if you have no intention of entering those fields, then I am having a problem seeing what you need Algebra for. Most people I know that get panic attacks about Algebra, can manipulate simple formulas and do everything that simple Algebra teaches you to do without thinking about it. A good carpenter can use slopes, calculate angles, measure and manipulate fractions, and read fairly complex schematics, all without the benefit of Algebra.
Zamfir wrote:Abstraction can be powerful because if the generalization to more cases, but it can also create barriers. Especiallly if people do not become skllied enough in the abstraction to actually make those generalizations.
KnightExemplar wrote:True. But there's a difference between a good carpenter and a Materials Engineer.
The "Carpenter" who can use AutoCad to simulate his designs before building them will be significantly more productive than a Carpenter who just willy nilly creates things. To understand the models behind the simulation, or to pick out the proper kinds of wood easily requires knowledge of variables. And that kind of knowledge is applied to things as trivial as hockey sticks.
KestrelLowing wrote:Personally, my guess is the biggest problem is unprepared teachers. There are very few self described "math people" who become teachers. A lot of teachers will likely teach by just going over example over example because they don't understand much beyond that. Obviously there are definitely exceptions, but I think the average teacher likely teaches like that because they don't know how to teach beyond that.
Tirian wrote: For instance, when a shift worker at a fast food restaurant talks about serving the customer, what is "the customer"? It's not about serving a specific customer, it's about the embodiment of serving any arbitrary customer from the general population. We don't say "Let x be a customer" and then solve the problem of serving x, but that is our intellectual process. That's a mature philosophic discussion -- Piaget called it the formal operational stage -- and it's a concept that requires extensive training in order to master any non-trivial exercise in decision-making.
Radical_Initiator wrote:What we need are not teachers who will agree to teach math, we need mathematicians who are interested in teaching.
Puppyclaws wrote:Radical_Initiator wrote:What we need are not teachers who will agree to teach math, we need mathematicians who are interested in teaching.
...and willing to take huge massive pay cuts in order to do so. Which is why this problem will never be solved by trying to change who teaches in our society.
Garm wrote:Massive pay cuts? What am I doing wrong with my life? It'd be a paycut, but not a massive one, if I left my current job to go teach math but only after five years of working my way through the company. It's not that teaching pays great (it doesn't, maybe 45k for high school math), it's just that high paying jobs for a pure math degree are kind of rare.
KestrelLowing wrote:Garm wrote:Massive pay cuts? What am I doing wrong with my life? It'd be a paycut, but not a massive one, if I left my current job to go teach math but only after five years of working my way through the company. It's not that teaching pays great (it doesn't, maybe 45k for high school math), it's just that high paying jobs for a pure math degree are kind of rare.
Yeah, but where you lose a large amount of people is in engineering. I'm in my last semester of school and if I get an offer lower than 50k, I will likely be a bit insulted. That's the average starting salary for mechanical engineers coming out of my school. As I'm in the top of my class, I would certainly expect to get paid more than the mean. It certainly wouldn't be unheard of for me to make something in the 6 figures range at the end of my career. Teaching doesn't hold a candle to that, not to mention you have to deal with kids' parents.![]()
addams wrote:Torture is Not how to get information.
The way to get information is with Blue Berry Pancakes.
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