What I do not understand is why the author who is the Associate editor of
the Journal of Chemical Education promotes, "Chemistry professors teach
students to convert a number in one set of units to any other set of units
using conversion factors. We also encourage our students to have a feel for
English-to-metric conversions that involve everyday things so that they
might recognize a miscalculation. Even though today's college freshmen have
been learning about the metric system since they were in elementary school,
some still struggle with these calculations."

 

If I am not mistaken all professional chemistry is done in metric units so
why teach chemistry (and conversions) in customary units at all? 

 

BTW- a couple weeks ago I attended the Future of Learning Conference at
Harvard. I meet the professor who teaches the Science Curriculum and
Instruction classes at Harvard and who runs many professional development
workshops for science teachers. I asked if her teachers were teaching
science in customary or metric units. She stated, that she believed most
science in the K-6 grades were all customary units. Of course, we have no
hard numbers but this response is consistent with many other conversations.
So, the author is incorrect!  Depending on the school, you may have been
exposed (without even the goal of proficiency) to metric system in lower
grades and the amount of metric system knowledge received after 6th grade
depends mostly on the background of your teachers.  If you are lucky enough
to have a teacher with a math or science degree, you are much more likely to
receive metric only (or metric-mostly) instruction in sciences; however, if
your teacher is "certified to teach" in math/science then well.....

 

While we are talking about inconsistencies in schools, I had a pre-calculus
teacher recently tell me that at his school AP classes are taught in metric
units and "normal" class in customary units. This comment bothered me quite
a bit! They are creating a disadvantage for the majority of kids without
even realizing it.     

 

Bridget Nagarajan

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

Metric Only STEM Education in the USA

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From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of John M. Steele
Sent: Tuesday, August 14, 2012 6:57 AM
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:51853] Re: Hard Lessons at the Olympics -- Or Just
Uneducated?

 


Another article with a more reasonable view about metric and the Olympics:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/cheryl-b-frech/science-news-numbers_b_1761879.
html

 

She highlights my frustration well.  Listening to NBC announcers babble in
feet and inches, while officials measure against the backdrop of metric
markings on the field is enormously confusing.  My solution is to mute the
announcers, watch the athletes, and get the official results (in metric)
from the results webpage.  (yes, NBC, that means I don't hear the
commercials)

--- On Mon, 8/13/12, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:


From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: [USMA:51850] Hard Lessons at the Olympics -- Or Just Uneducated?
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
Date: Monday, August 13, 2012, 1:08 PM

Frankly, I am getting tired of all this handwringing about how "hard" the
metric system is.  Get over it!  Six billion people around the world seem to
have no problem with it.  Are Americans ignoramuses?

And now we find out (surprise!) that our USA Olympians look like fools
before those of other nations because they haven't been educated in the
world's (and the official US) measurement system.  And these people are
supposed to be the cream of the crop.  What an example we are setting for
the rest of the world.  No wonder we're tied for 17th place with Iceland in
education!

Hard Lessons At the Olympics, Like The Metric System
http://www.gpb.org/news/2012/08/12/hard-lessons-at-the-olympics-like-the-met
ric-system

 

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