As far as I am concerned America could have never got to where it is today and 
what it has achieved in the process if it was full of dumb people or if 
measuring things had any influence.

 

I too saw 'yard' as being the same 'yard' as almost 100% of people would be 
referring too.  Real world scenarios and all that.
 


Date: Thu, 8 Oct 2009 21:38:13 -0600
Subject: [USMA:45973] Re: teaching customary units
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]

While I cannot say that I speak for 100% of Americans, I think I can safely 
state that  when most people in the USA refer to a "yard", they are talking 
about the one with 36 inches in it.  And, each one of those inches is equal to 
25.4 mm.  We don't know what year it was approved, agreed to, standardized or 
redefined.  What's more, we don't care. It equals thirty six 25.4mm inches.

Unfortunately, the point of my post was pretty much missed by everybody that 
responded.  My point is, that the PROCESS of doing conversions develops skills 
that are related to and involved in the PROCESS of SOLVING problems.  If a 
person can't set up the problem, then they can't solve it.  If you can't set up 
the factors to perform a lengthy conversion, then you can't perform the 
conversion.  The processes are very similar.   Critical thinking and reasoning 
skills are only developed through practicing them.  You can't look them up in a 
book or an ISO standard.

If you withhold the teaching of the process of doing conversion completely, or 
until high school, you are withholding a tool that is an easy and fun way to 
start getting kids to THINK about what they are doing and why, and what they 
can do with a given piece of information.

I didn't mean to touch a sensitive spot, but I get tired of hearing the members 
of this forum run down Americans as being "dumb" or "inferior" because we 
haven't yet adopted the SI to the degree that many out there think we should.

Best regards.

Aaron Harper



On Thu, Oct 8, 2009 at 12:19 AM, Pat Naughtin 
<[email protected]> wrote:





On 2009/10/08, at 14:40 , Aaron Harper wrote:

Having a student have to figure out how to get from one unit to an equivalent 
unit in another system 



Dear Aaron,


I am having trouble with your line, 'Having a student have to figure out how to 
get from one unit to an equivalent unit in another system …' as I know of only 
one system of measurement.


And I am also sure that only one system of measurement has ever existed.


When the decimal metric system was developed from Wilkins universal measure in 
the 1790s, it became the world's first measurement system. Subsequently this 
first idea for a measuring system evolved from the decimal metric system 
through the simpler name of metric system to the International System of Units 
(SI). 


As you know this is a complete system of units that is able to measure 
everything from the smallest to the largest things in the entire Universe. As 
Condorcet put it in the early 1790s, the decimal metric system is:


 'for all time; for all people'.


I am aware that there were subsequent refits of bits and pieces of various 
small groups of old measuring words. The UK tried to develop a decimal currency 
based on 10 florins to a pound in about 1824 while they held to the idea of 24 
pennies to a florin.


Some scientists tried to copy the coherent properties of the metric system with 
their foot-pound-second "system" and the foot-poundal-second "system" while 
some engineers tried to do the same with their foot-slug-second "system"; all 
done while the foot changed its length in, at least, these years: 1824, 1834, 
1855, 1893, and 1959. I find it impossible to recognise these attempts as 
comprehensive or universal measuring "systems".


The point that I want to make is that it is not possible to convert from one 
system to another system when there has only ever been one single system – the 
metric system – that is formally known as the International System of Units 
(SI). All the rest are just more or less random collections of old pre-metric 
measuring words.


Now let's consider an actual conversion problem.


Convert ten yards into metres.


This problem should not even be attempted until you answer this question:


Which yard do you mean? Are you talking about the 1859 metric-defined 
international yard, the 1893 metric-defined yard, (the statute yard or the 
survey yard of the USA), the interim yard between 1834 and 1855 based on the 
length of a pendulum with no real fixed length, the 1855 UK yard based on an 
artefact, the 1824 UK Imperial yard (1832 in the USA) that got burned with the 
UK Houses of Parliament in 1834 or one of the many earlier yards that appeared 
from time to time all with slightly varying lengths (possibilities here are 
three Elizabeth I feet, the Edward I ulna, or three Roman feet, etc.)?


If you don't ask all of these questions you infer that there are two "systems" 
metric and only one other, when the facts are that there has only ever been one 
system – the metric system as stated above – and all of the other old 
hodge-podge of measuring words with multiple definitions that have varied 
through time.


Hhhrrrmmmph!


P.S. Apologies for being so grumpy – you've hit a pet peeve!










Cheers,
 
Pat Naughtin
Author of the ebook, Metrication Leaders Guide, that you can obtain from 
http://metricationmatters.com/MetricationLeadersGuideInfo.html 
PO Box 305 Belmont 3216,
Geelong, Australia
Phone: 61 3 5241 2008


Metric system consultant, writer, and speaker, Pat Naughtin, has helped 
thousands of people and hundreds of companies upgrade to the modern metric 
system smoothly, quickly, and so economically that they now save thousands each 
year when buying, processing, or selling for their businesses. Pat provides 
services and resources for many different trades, crafts, and professions for 
commercial, industrial and government metrication leaders in Asia, Europe, and 
in the USA. Pat's clients include the Australian Government, Google, NASA, 
NIST, and the metric associations of Canada, the UK, and the USA. See 
http://www.metricationmatters.com for more metrication information, contact Pat 
at [email protected] or to get the free 'Metrication matters' 
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