Natalie and kPa,

Current students *are being taught SI*;  at least those using "Physical Science 
Concepts in Action" Prentice Hall (2009 and 2011 Editions)!!!  See that your 
school district is using this text or a similar text with exclusive use of SI.

Military Veterans  *speak metric units of measurement*!!!  Just listen to some 
of them speak in 'meters' on TV.

I oppose 'duality' for 30 to 40 more years.  SI should dominate much sooner 
than that!

Even the National Geographic (US Edition) is beginning to accept metric units 
of measurement.

I do not believe that units outside the SI are being taught widely in current 
physics, chemistry, and biology courses in American colleges, or an abridged 
version of the metric system.  Do you mean cgs (+esu +emu), kPa?

On the negative side; authors of the AP Style Manual continue to resist 
adoption of SI, and

the sad fact is that most legislators have law degrees and experience limited 
to courtroom contests, with little knowledge of STEM subjects which would make 
them more receptive to new metic legislation.  e.g. amendment of the FPLA to 
permit SI-only labeling.

I certainly agree that learning to think in metric units *without conversions* 
is a great advantage of students overseas, and a needed skill of next 
generation US students.

Eugene Mechtly
________________________________
From: [email protected] [[email protected]] on behalf of Natalia 
Permiakova [[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, September 08, 2013 8:49 AM
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:53230] Re: \"Math Conversion-Metric System Help!,\" Cries a 
Nursing Student

The math/science education worries me the most.

Unless metric is the primary measurement reported on packaging, road signs, 
weather forecast, etc.,  it will stay foreign language for the kids. Kids pick 
up things very quickly, and no effort will be needed to get them used to metric 
system, especially when they are taught metric system in school(which i assume 
all the schools do now).

It breaks my heart when I see foreign kids converting/calculating in their 
heads so easily, smiling and enjoying the task, as opposite to be close to 
impossible to USA kids, considered by them a torture, not fun.

I would keep US custom measurements in parentheses for another 30-40 years or 
until it gets completely obsolete.

Natalie







________________________________
From: Kilopascal <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, September 8, 2013 8:25 AM
Subject: [USMA:53229] \"Math Conversion-Metric System Help!,\" Cries a Nursing 
Student

The problem results from a number of reasons.

1.) Not being taught the metric system in school as a child.

2.) Not using the metric system in every aspect of one's daily life.

3.) Trying to convert rather than learn and associate.
If these students are struggling how will they ever be effective care givers?
I can see medical errors abounding.
A good reason for a country to fully metricate is to assure that its students 
when adults who will need to function in metric will be able to do so instead 
of the metric system becoming a life-long stumbling block.
Here is a comment from a poster to Reddit metric that sums it up:
 
http://www.reddit.com/r/Metric/comments/1ly5yr/math_conversionmetric_system_help/
It is idiotic to work with one system and use another one at home. You need to 
be able to feel units not just mechanically calculate them. If a fat guy says 
he weighs 80 kg a nurse that isn't used to metric might think that is 
reasonable.
Conversions are seldom precise. People round the numbers and they can be 
converted back and forth increasing the errors. Healthcare would be safer and 
easier if everything was metric.
Also what a waste of schooling. While the nursing students in the rest of the 
world are learning to be a nurse the American students have to learn basic 
units. The same thing with the military. Is metric taught in basic training? 
When I did basic it was just taken for granted that everyone new how many 
centimeters are in a kilometer and what time it is at 20:00.
The last statement is something I didn't think of but applies to all 
disciplines.  How much time is wasted in American college technical classes, 
such as Engineering, Physics, Chemistry, Biology, etc, in an effort to teach an 
abridged and error prone version of the metric system, when it should have been 
learned a decade or so earlier and already ingrained in one's thinking?



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