May I remind readers of what Confucius said:

 

"If I hear, I will forget

If I see, I will remember

If I do, I will understand".

 

The problem in the United Kingdom is that children do not "do metric" -
car's speeds are in mph, heights usually in feet and inches, weights in
stones and pounds and so on.  I believe that the same happens in the US
(except that they only use pounds for weighing themselves). 

 

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Paul Trusten
Sent: 16 March 2010 16:40
To: U.S. Metric Association
Cc: U.S. Association Metric
Subject: [USMA:46953] Re: Do most Americans REALLY find the metric system to
be easier to use than the customary system?

 

More excellent points, John. My post is getting superb constructive
feedback. 

 

I agree that metric should be taught as a system to be used, not loathed.
Every time a student takes away the notion that metrication means
manipulating 25.4-mm units, it means we are failing at metric education.

 

Your point on education brings me back to how I became sold on metric. It
was when I was a pharmacy student, and had to add up weights, first in the
diabolical apothecary system and then in metric.  From then on, it made much
more sense to use metric, not just in pharmacy,but for ALL measurements!


Paul Trusten


On Mar 16, 2010, at 10:16, "John M. Steele" <[email protected]>
wrote:

Good points, Paul.  I would like to add some remarks on two of them:

 

1) Familiar enough:  Most people know the (Customary) units adequately to
use them, but not the "system" interconnecting them.  (Please don't argue
about whether it is a "system;" it may not be as systemic as SI, but
something interconnects them).  Most real people don't do a lot of
conversions, they just use the units.  The FPLA, UPLR, and commerce in
general pick units such that this approach is sufficient.  Even things like
mixing oil and gas for two cycle engines, which should cause horrible
conversions, are simplified to ounces per gallon; measure the ounces, then
measure the gallons.  No need to know 128  fl oz = 1 gallon.  The very
points we emphasize, interconnectedness and ease of conversion recall the
horrors of my 2nd point.

 

2) Resistance to knowledge of the metric system:  Whether or not they also
learn some Customary, kids have learned something about metric for decades,
unfortunately, due to the way it is taught, mostly bad things.  In my
opinion, this contributes to the resistance.  In the 50's, I don't recall
learning any metric until high school.  In the 70's, my two oldest children
learned it first, in elementary school (I had to teach them enough Customary
to get by).  In the 80's my youngest child learned mixed units.  However,
beyond learning to measure in centimeters in 1st or 2nd grade, it was MOSTLY
taught as conversions.  Those were conversions between Customary and metric,
mixed unit story problems where they had to reason out which to convert, or
problems involving scientific notation and extremely large and small numbers
(how many cubic nanometers in a cubic meter).  The kids come out of the
school system NOT having learned that metric is simpler, but that the
NASTIEST problems involve metric.  Is there any wonder Americans resist.

 

HOW they are taught metric is more important than whether they are taught
metric-only or both.  They need to learn about measuring in metric and
practical conversions (millimeters in a meter, meters in a kilometer are
good to know, millimeters in a kilometer is a little silly, and more extreme
is really silly).  The schools need to teach kids how to handle scientific
notation and extremely large/small numbers, but the problems shouldn't be
chosen to only bias kids against the metric system (how many grains in a
ton, how many mils in a light year, how many dry pints in a wet barrel)

 


  _____  


From: Paul Trusten <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, March 16, 2010 9:46:20 AM
Subject: [USMA:46948] Do most Americans REALLY find the metric system to be
easier to use than the customary system?

Do most Americans really find the metric system easier to use than the
customary system? 

Perhaps not!

 For those of us who support U.S. metrication,the ease-of-use advantage of
metric has been dogma,  but I find myself doubting whether or not the U.S.
public finds it to be so. 

The public may perceive the customary system to be easier to use than the
metric system because of:

1) Familiarity with the customary system.  However awkward the mathematical
relationships might be among inches, feet, and miles, or ounces, fluid
ounces, quarts, and gallons, and no matter how much we like to say that many
Americans do not know many of the details (the number of feet in a mile or
the difference between wet and dry measure), a large number of the American
people seem to believe that the system is familiar to them.  They will even
preface the phrase "American units" with the phrase, "good,old."
Familiarity breeds consent.

2) Lack of knowledge of the metric system.  Too often, the phrase "metric
system" appears in U.S. articles and in American discourse as an object of
immediate resentment and derision. It is attacked before it even gets
discussed.  It is like the habit of refusing to eat a food one has never
even tried.  It's a case of contempt prior to investigation. USMA has urged
U.S. schools to teach only the metric system, but the National Council of
Teachers of Mathematics has not yet agreed to this. Word is not really out
about metric. 

3) Monosyllabic names for many customary units.  Our opponents sometimes
raise this as an advantage of the old system over the metric system. I think
we should pay attention to this opinion.  Inch, foot, yard, rod, mile.
Ounce, pint, quart.  Two exceptions might be bushel and gallon.  Compare
this to "millimeter," "centimeter," or "kilogram."  Of course, metric is far
more logical and coherent, but--and I hate to admit this---logic and
coherency may just not be at the top of the American shopping list for
measurement needs.  

These obstacles to public acceptance of metrication can be overcome.
Universal metric education, driven by political,academic, and industry
leadership in the U.S., is the best solution.   Once metric education
becomes a fact of American life, the barriers to the acceptance of metric
will come down. But, I think we need to recognize the obstacles.  Doing so
will ease our current impatience with the lack of progress. 

 

Paul Trusten, R. Ph.

Public Relations Director

U.S. Metric Association, Inc.

 

 

 

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