Back in the 1960s, when my Dad started junior college, freshman math...
that everyone was required to take, was calculus I.



On Wed, Oct 19, 2016 at 3:55 AM, Richard Shefferson <dorma...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> I normally do not contribute to ECOLOG (my apologies...), but thought I
> should put my own 2 cents in on this one. I work in Japan at a major
> university (although I am American and educated for the most part in the
> US), and part of my job involves admissions into our international BS
> program. We take applications from all over the world, and interview
> students. As a part of this process, we generally quiz students in their
> understanding of mathematics. What has shocked me in this regard is that
> American students applying to our program, who include amazingly smart
> students with top SAT scores, understand mathematics at a far lower level
> than students from the entire rest of the planet (this is not an
> exaggeration). European and Asian students applying, as high school
> students, into out undergrad degree already understand calculus and
> probability theory at levels I've only seen in American 3rd or 4th year
> college math majors. I knew before moving to Japan that American students
> were a little behind when it comes to STEM education, and in terms of the
> basic sciences I think they are just a little behind. But in terms of
> mathematics, they are at the bottom of cliff, and the rest of the world is
> at the top of that cliff. As a personal aside, as an immigrant to the US, I
> have also been strongly dismayed at the fact that the simplest math
> questions always result in someone asking me for the answer. Simple
> conversions from IMperial to metric, and so forth.
>
> So, to end my little rant, I would say that a discussion of whether to end
> the teaching of calculus to ecology majors only reinforces my own belief
> that American students are moving even further below the rest of the world
> when it comes to STEM education.
>
> Sincerely,
>
> Rich Shefferson
>
>
> New book on the Evolution of Senescence in the Tree of Life
> http://tinyurl.com/SenescenceBook
>
> Sent from my NSA tracking device
>
> On Tue, Oct 18, 2016 at 9:09 AM, Neufeld, Howard S. <
> neufel...@appstate.edu> wrote:
>
>> Dear All -
>>
>>
>>
>> I am participating in a study here at Appalachian State University about
>> whether we should restructure the mathematics and statistics requirements
>> for our biology/ecology majors. For example, should we require all majors
>> to take an entire semester of calculus?
>>
>>
>>
>> I have written an explanation of why we are looking into this, and you
>> can read the essay by going to this link on Google Drive:
>>
>> https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/0BxpSVO5IUz-EMGdwU1lD
>> NjhSRFE?usp=sharing
>>
>>
>>
>> I would welcome comments from those interested in this subject, which
>> would help us out here at Appalachian State in our discussions of this
>> important subject.
>>
>>
>>
>> Thanks!
>>
>> Howie Neufeld
>>
>> --
>> Dr. Howard S. Neufeld, Professor
>> Director, Southern Appalachian Environmental Research and Education Center 
>> (SAEREC)
>> Chair, Appalachian Interdisciplinary Atmospheric Research Group (AppalAIR)
>>
>> Mailing Address:
>>    Department of Biology
>>    572 Rivers St.
>>    Appalachian State University
>>    Boone, NC 28608
>>    Tel: 828-262-2683; Fax 828-262-2127
>>
>> Websites:
>>     Academic: http://biology.appstate.edu/faculty-staff/104
>>     Personal: http://www.appstate.edu/~neufeldhs/index.html
>>     SAEREC: http://saerec.appstate.edu
>>     AppalAIR: http://appalair.appstate.edu
>>     Fall Colors:
>>           Academic: http://biology.appstate.edu/fall-colors
>>           Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FallColorGuy
>>
>>
>


-- 
Malcolm L. McCallum
Director of the Aquatic Resources Center
Aquaculture and Water Quality Research Scientist
School of Agriculture and Applied Sciences
Langston University
Langston, Oklahoma


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Researchgate:
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