My letter to the WSJ made the cut; however, they edited the comments for length 
and added the word aren’t twice!! Hopefully, now this conversation can get 
“real” as they say……..

 

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Your article “Cooking a Poundcake in a Metric Oven Is No Easy Task” 
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323713104578134962731896422.html>
  (page one, Nov. 24) correctly points out that efforts to convert the U.S. to 
the metric system have faced significant cultural resistance. Although 
metric-system devotees are often portrayed as amusing eccentrics, a far more 
serious issue involves the significant disadvantage imposed on American 
students by an educational system that fails to adopt the weights and measures 
used not only by 95% of the world’s population, but also in the fastest-growing 
occupations in this country.

Current research suggests that as much as 40% of instructional time in primary 
and secondary education is now spent on standardized test preparation and 
administration. By using customary units in standardized testing, particularly 
in science, American educators and our children are faced with the unique 
liability of dual-measurement instruction. 

Students who choose to enter science, technology, engineering and math fields, 
as well as health care, must learn to use the metric system. But those aren’t 
the only careers that aren’t well served by the use of customary units in 
instruction. Most modern career paths in manufacturing, including all American 
automotive manufacturing, involve industries that have voluntarily converted to 
metric units. Those serving in this country’s armed forces are also required to 
learn and function in metric units. 

I wish this article would have dedicated less time to the philosophical, 
cultural aversion to the adoption of the metric system and instead focused on a 
more practical question: How might America’s preference for customary units 
impact your child’s employment opportunities? 

Bridget Nagarajan 

Executive Director 

M Power 

New Orleans 

Although we’re gratified by the exposure and the positive response we’ve 
received to your article, we take particular exception to one statement: Four 
millimeters must be described as “0.16 inches for the uninitiated.” We need 
not, and do not, convert back from the metric system to customary units. 

Rather than being perceived among Americans (as it has been for too long) as 
some esoteric ritual from a land that time forgot, the decimal metric system 
ought to be adopted into mainstream American life as our measurement system. It 
is a reality among billions of people in the world, and it should be a reality 
here in the U.S., too.

Paul Trusten 

Vice President 

U.S. Metric Association 

Midland, Texas 

If Zach Rodriguez, a metric devotee mentioned in your article, is that 
committed to metric, why didn’t he call his cake a “kilo cake”? Maybe it’s 
because a cake by any other name would not be a poundcake.

Fran Lobo 

Sarasota, Fla. 

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(via Instapaper <http://www.instapaper.com/> )

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