Posted on 10/06/2023 2:58:14 PM PDT by nickcarraway
-Bill Gates wrote a blog post suggesting three ways to improve math education.
-He believes that math skills are a "powerful indicator" of future success.
When Bill Gates was in eighth grade, a teacher asked him why he was "so lazy" in math class. He responded, rather boldly, that the class was "not doing anything interesting."
It turns out the Microsoft cofounder and philanthropist actually loves math — and is very good at it — but he also acknowledges that it's "America's least favorite subject."
In essence, Gates says that math education hasn't kept up with how the world has evolved.
"The way that algebra, geometry, and calculus are taught has barely changed — despite tremendous transformation in the labor market," he wrote, adding that tools like calculators, computers, and AI chatbots have made it "harder and harder to explain to students why they should learn how to do long division or find the area of a trapezoid by hand."
The billionaire returned to eighth grade for a day to gain insight into the math classes of today. He detailed the experience on his blog, and proposed three ways to fix America's problem with math:
Advertisement Math should be tailored to students' interests, capabilities, and goals Math shouldn't be a solo expedition, but a class that prioritizes communication and problem-solving as a group Lessons should be applied to real-world problems, like coming up with budget or "estimating population growth" Gates experienced this three-prong strategy being implemented at Chula Vista Middle School in Southern California, he wrote. The school is a part of the Networks for School Improvement, a Gates Foundation initiative.
In a lesson about measuring the volume of a pyramid, Amilcar Fernandez — who runs the math department at Chula Vista — gave students popcorn containers. One was shaped like a pyramid, and the other was shaped like a rectangular prism. Fernandez asked the eighth-grade students to talk through which one they would buy at a movie theater to get the best deal.
"Mr. Fernandez gave his students a real-world application that they've likely already encountered—and an incentive to learn the answer. After all, who doesn't want to get the most bang for their buck?" Gates wrote.
The new approach to math seems to be working at Chula Vista: Math proficiency rates have increased 18% over the past three years at the school, Gates wrote.
That compares to nationwide math scores, which have been falling for several years. The pandemic decelerated many students' learning progress, and recent data on math scores for eighth graders and fourth graders across the country shows that there's been a significant setback since 2019.
Even before the pandemic, though, scores were declining. A study published in June by the Nation's Report Card which found that found that math scores for 13-year-olds in seventh and eighth grade have dropped 14 percentage points over the past decade, to levels not seen since the 1990s.
In his post, Gates said math skills are a "powerful indicator" of future success, and shared how the Gates Foundation — the philanthropic organization he founded with his ex-wife Melinda — is approaching math education to better suit students' needs. College grads who land high-earning jobs often major in fields that require strong math skills. Many of the highest-earning college graduates majored in some form of engineering — which relies on skills ranging from basic arithmetic to calculus — a report from the New York Federal Reserve found.
The Gates Foundation and Chula Vista Middle School did not immediately respond to Insider's request for a comment.
Somehow we got to the Moon, circumnavigated the globe, and split the atom with old school Math.
He’s white and mansplains…
Three, allow kids to advance as quickly as they individually can. If some eight year old can handle calculus and he wants to do it, let him.
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When my kids started school in the late 70s I enrolled them in a Baptist Church school that had a form of that and as a result they were miles ahead of their neighborhood friends who attended public schools.
Maybe he can mansplain the differences between the Gregorian and Julian calendars...or not.
Federal government controlled schools are racist..
bring back 1950’s standards
k-12 education isn't all that but for now, due to some remnants of capitalism, we're way more innovative than anybody else. But that won't be the case after another four years of Biden. Followed by eight years of Newsom.
Gates can’t mansplain anything since he’s a beta twink.
Bring back Arithmetic!!!
Gates has a point. Connecting math problems to tangible real world issues and historical examples tends to engage the problem solving instincts of students. Add in small prizes and some classroom showmanship and most kids get drawn in.
I remember some set theory and such being introduced in perhaps 5th or 6th grade - that would have been in the 1962-64 window. It was not too big a deal for me as I could handle the abstractions. It was years later before I recognized it as an attempt to make younger kids more receptive to advanced math concepts in algebra and beyond. Teachers who were not math types were often baffled by it but they were not the targets.
Today, rather than attempting to lift kids to higher achievement, our math teaching experts are too willing to excuse failure.
FUBG
Arithmetic never left. I never learned enough, but it’s still there.
Luckily my daughter learned much more than I did and has a master’s in mechanical engineering and now working on an MBA.
It was years later before I recognized it as an attempt to make younger kids more receptive to advanced math concepts in algebra and beyond.
Math was my best, and favorite, subject.
I enjoyed Physics as well.
“If the Earth has 7,500,000,000 people, and we make 90% take a vaccine that will kill them, will there be enough people left to mow my lawn and serve me food?”
Completely false.
Fuzzy math has supplanted traditional math, that's a big issue. Kids need to learn times tables, long division, algebra, geometry, and for success tracked kids, precalculus.
Individual excellence is not rewarded, that's a big issue. Kids aren't challenged any longer (don't want to offend anyone).
Kids don't even do homework any more, that's a big issue.
The first time I took trig was the mid 1970's. I borrowed my dads trig book dated1949. It's was straight trig, formulas, no explanations, no color pictures or metaphors/analogies, just formulas.
Now? Now...I think most college students need five math classes in college before they reach the prerequisite trig course one needed for college entry.
Did you have to walk to school for miles with no shoes uphill in the snow?
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