John,

Not all children even have the ability to master elementary arithmetic 
(addition, subtraction, and multiplication) or "long division" by hand (without 
a calculator), (why bother with LD by hand?) to say nothing of expecting older 
students to learn algebra, trig, and calculus.  Only a few persons have the 
talents and diligence to win a Nobel Prize in a STEM field or in *any* field!  
Educational standards should not expect *all* students to master  elementary 
arithmetic (+ - x).  Those having more talent should, however, be offered the 
"opportunity" for more.

I would set the minimum standard for *most* pupils at mastery of + - x, without 
requiring long division by hand.

"No child left behind" was an impossible objective which many states have now 
discarded or made optional.

Gene Mechtly
________________________________
From: [email protected] [[email protected]] on behalf of John 
Altounji [[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, August 01, 2012 4:35 PM
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:51810] FW: Is Algebra Necessary? And follow-up question

Let’s reward mediocrity.  A well written opinion to put the US even deeper 
behind other industrial contries.

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

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Metric Rules
Sent: Monday, July 30, 2012 7:27 AM
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:51802] Is Algebra Necessary? And follow-up question

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&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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