Well said.

 

Though my teaching experience, most drop out students are not only failing 
algebra, but many other subjects.  They plainly admit that they are lazy.

 

 

John Altounji

One size does not fit all.
Social promotion ruined Education.

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
John M. Steele
Sent: Monday, July 30, 2012 8:34 AM
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:51803] Re: Is Algebra Necessary? And follow-up question

 


Well, I suppose he has proven that "political science" is the only science that 
doesn't require mathematics.

 

Algebra is the key to all higher mathematics, and various topics in higher 
mathematics are key to all understanding of science (with the possible 
exception of political science, which may be an oxymoron).

 

Perhaps we could try better teaching methods so the kids actually learn it, or 
in earlier grades do a better job of teaching reading and arithmetic so kids 
are ready for the basic concepts of algebra.  Kids who can't read, and can't do 
arithmetic with their calculators don't have a chance of "getting" algebra or 
ever catching up.

 

As for metrication, do you hope to teach actual science and engineering or 
"science appreciation"?  Science and engineering involve lots of math, but they 
also involve clear understanding of measurement.  Quantities, units, 
inter-relationships by way of formulas are vital to any useful level of science 
of engineering.  If kids already understand and use metric, the concepts of 
science are FAR easier to teach in metric units (which I suppose gives foreign 
kids an advantage because they are brought up with metric.  Teaching science 
and engineering in foot-pound units is just a nightmare.  All the stupid 
conversion factors make the concepts much more difficult to grasp.  If the kids 
don't understand metric, you have to pause and teach it first.  It would have 
been better to teach it in early grades by SUBSTANTIALLY suppressing the 
teaching of Customary units and conversions.

 

However, I don't know how to answer your question on "how big a piece."  The 
pieces of the education puzzle are like the bricks of a building.  Each row of 
bricks is built on the bricks before it.  If any of the bricks are missing or 
defective, the building is at risk, and the "foundation" courses of brickwork 
are the most important because they support the whole building.  

 

The kids need to know how to measure and manipulate metric units, make sensible 
prefix choices etc.  Stupid problems, like how many nanometers in a kilometer, 
may have some use in teaching scientific notation, but they serve to make the 
metric system look stupid and impractical.

--- On Mon, 7/30/12, Metric Rules <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Metric Rules <[email protected]>
Subject: [USMA:51802] Is Algebra Necessary? And follow-up question
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
Date: Monday, July 30, 2012, 10:26 AM

I imagine policy makers in China and India (and even Canada) sitting around 
reading this piece and thinking…. Go ahead U.S., let’s see how that approach 
works out for you! We can only poach talent from other countries for so long.

 

Is Algebra Necessary? 
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/29/opinion/sunday/is-algebra-necessary.html?_r=1 
<http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/29/opinion/sunday/is-algebra-necessary.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all>
 &pagewanted=all

 

A measurement related question and something that I have been thinking about 
lately. With all the different problems we have in education from teacher 
qualifications, teacher tenure, impact of standardized tests, teacher 
evaluation, influence of text book and testing companies, lack of parental 
involvement (new social role of schools), poverty and related food and physical 
insecurity, classroom management issues, our negative cultural legacy thinking 
that math is a gift and not a reward for hard work, the use of calculators in 
elementary school, willingness to debate and implement lower standards to 
“pass” more kids, the grouping of kids by age only not other factors such as 
ability, schools not accommodating many learning styles, broken up and repeated 
(not built upon) curricula, the fact that we have very powerful people 
questioning the legitimacy of science, our inability to connect, in a 
meaningful way, the U.S’s current and future position in the world to our 
quality and access to education,  just to name a few. How would you prioritize 
metrication in education?  This is a how to choose your battle question. I 
recognize we are a bias group here. 

 

As some of you know, I work with a nonprofit focused exclusively on metrication 
in education.  Our arguments revolve around the importance of measurement as 
the foundation of STEM instruction and STEM knowledge and why the practice of 
dual-measurement instruction is an inefficient use of limited class time. I 
know that measurement is only a piece of the education puzzle but how big of a 
piece? 

 

Bridget Nagarajan

Metric Rules <http://www.metricrules.org/>  

Metric Only STEM Education in the USA

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