Parents' frustration with distance learning -- "Common Core Math Methods"

In summary: Common Core calls for students to be able to do up to 20x10 multiplication tables.At first I thought the article was saying that for many parents, helping their kids with their math homework was the hardest because maybe they weren't all that great at math themselves.But the real reason is that the "Common Core" math methods used in primary school these days involve new tricks ("grouping") to solve the problems. The methods that we are all used to have been replaced, so if you're going to help your kids with their work, you'll need to learn the new paradigm. Sigh.
  • #36
TeethWhitener said:
I agree. Common core was meant to solve the problem that math had basically just become drills for years on end (that’s certainly my recollection of elementary and middle school—I was interested in math in spite of, not because of, my experience in school).

I had zero interest in math, and was not even good at it at primary school. During later primary years I was interested in electronics - but could never understand the explanations of what parts like inductors and capacitors did. I pulled my hair out trying - but to no avail. We started school at 5 during those days and when I hit grade 8 at 12 we did algebra and geometry (we combine them here in Aus rather than separate subjects) it all just clicked. I raced through the textbook in about a week. Then I applied it to understanding feedback in electronics which had totally defeated me. I just wrote down the equation of the circuit, solved it, and low and behold you saw how as the gain of the amp increased it became more and more determined by the resistors in the feedback path. I was hooked. A bit later - 13 or 14 - I actually forget - I learned calculus, and low and behold, the voltage across an inductor was proportional to the differential of the current, and for a capacitor it was proportional differential of the voltage the inductance and capacitance was just the constant of proportionality. Then after learning complex numbers, phase shift and all of that stuff was trivial. Of course my school math suffered - I did not learn for example the simple proof of the quadratic equation formula using completing the square - I did that much later by myself. But boy I had a lot of fun just following what took my fancy at the time.

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #37
etotheipi said:
Details in the "Judging Books by Their Covers" chapter in the book "Surely you're joking Mr Feynman!". A fun example:

Yes - Feynman should have written the books.

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #38
PAllen said:
On the issue of “the right method” versus “the right answer”, Feynman had an extreme position. The only thing that matters is the right answer. Any method that works for a student should get full credit if answer is right; and no credit should be given for the wrong answer, no matter how well the “right method” is used.
My grading style wasn't as extreme as Feynman's, especially for problems with very many steps. If students knew what they were doing, but made a bonehead mistake toward the end of their calculations, I gave partial credit.
In one class I taught, Intermediate Algebra (really just 9th grade algebra sped up to 10 weeks), one of my students complained that I had marked her correct answer to a homework problem wrong, but her friend got the wrong answer, and received half credit. She thought that was very unfair.
I told her that her friend's work was logical and easy to follow, but with a mistake, while hers was a mishmash of random, unconnected gibberish that miraculously ended up with the correct answer, which was given in the answers section of the book.
 
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  • #39
From what I understand common core is perceived as, and I may be a bit off, they show kids seemingly odd ways of solving a simple math problem. I probably figured out various forms of this on my own many years ago. Example: What is 9 x 15? Heck I have no idea off the top of my head but I know 10 x 15 is 150 and it's easy to subtract 15 off that to come up with the correct answer of 135. Now this certainly isn't worth bragging about but I do find it interesting that according to my dad, my grandpa was taught math like this in a country school more than a century ago. He was born in 1903. I sometimes think my grandpa's generation had stronger math skills per hour of school than anything today. I have seen many posts on Facebook by people with kids in school with examples similar to the example I gave and people completely tear this concept to pieces and give the 'correct' way to do the math problem.
 
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  • #40
I had read a lot of concern about common core, but when I had to teach a lightning review of grade 8-12 to a family member to pass an equivalency test, I was pleasantly surprised. In my opinion, it’s a perfectly acceptable system and indeed even has many advantages over the old way.
My only complaint is the really aggravating amount of online multiple choice tests, often with ambiguous syntax. Things like whether 1/2 (x+1) is a linear expression or a fraction.

The amount of absolutely phenomenal videos on YouTube and Khan is also a game changer. I watched a video the other day teaching the central limit theorem, and there is absolutely no way I could ever teach it that succinctly or as well. The visuals alone is well out of reach of a normal teacher with a blackboard.

What I think remains necessary and vastly undervalued by educators, is speed training. Especially for advanced students. Its quite unglamorous to teach (drills and more drills), but learning to be lightning quick with your integrals, and evaluating expressions and arithmetic quickly is a skill that stays with you for the rest of your life, and saves countless hours (and is one of the skills that translates directly into research success).
 
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  • #41
I predict this thread will easily surpass 100 posts. At least in the past, these discussions of pedagogy seem to live on forever. I taught for a long time in a college math dept and listened to many of these arguments. I noticed that no one ever agreed about how teaching should be done, when discussing it in the abstract in the coffee room, but usually these same people, when actually observing each other in the classroom, tended to agree that what was being done was good. I don't know why this is, maybe it is impossible to convey in words just what one thinks should be imparted, whereas in practice, an experienced teacher has learned how to make his/her vision work. Of course I used to have a reputation as a thread killer, but this time, I doubt it.
 
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  • #42
At the risk of adding to the possibility of exceeding 100 posts, I must say I personally like, for primary school math (here in Aus defined as years 1-6) the Montessori method - its very experiential:
https://hollismontessori.org/blog/2018/3/19/montessori-basics-how-math-progresses-through-the-levels

Years 7, 8 and 9 can cover algebra, geometry and trigonometry, then in grade 10 you start calculus. Good students can do calculus in grade 9. I actually do not believe in grade 11 and 12 at all - you go to university, trade school or technical training of some sort after that - here in Aus called TAFE - Technical and Further Education. Entrance to university is via a few university subjects done in grade 10. TAFE generally requires no entrance requirements and you can start in grade 10. You proceed from certificate 3 to certificate 4 to diploma to advanced diploma stopping at the level that suits your goals. Certificate 4 or beyond is enough for university admission. Diploma's are generally considered equivalent to the first year of university, while advanced diplomas are equivalent to second year. Many careers have overlap eg you do a diploma in Nursing and you are considered an enrolled nurse, start working, and with 4 years part time study while working you become a full registered nurse.

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #43
I always wonder what it means to "do calculus", in say the 9th grade. The hard concept is mainly the definition of "completeness" the real numbers, and without such a definition one cannot prove the existence of the things calculus is designed to find, such as maxima and minima, and areas of curved regions.

So does such an early calculus course just assume the real numbers are in one to one correspondence with the points of an intuitive continuous "number line", or perhaps even state that they are represented by infinite decimals, or (unlikely) give the axioms for them as an Archimedean ordered field?

Are limits introduced in an intuitive way, or are they defined carefully? If they are defined, are basic facts about them proved, such as the limit of a product is the product of the limits, or maybe that the limit represented by the infinite decimal .9999... is 1?

I.e. one can teach "calculus" roughly along the lines of Calculus made easy, by Silvanus P. Thompson, where nothing at all is defined precisely and nothing is proved, (and several erroneous statements are made), but numerous examples in using calculus techniques are illustrated;

or along the lines of say George Thomas's early books, where some rigor is given but as I recall real numbers are a bit cavalierly treated and basic existence theorems are not proved, but many useful practical methods are taught;

or one can teach it as presented in Spivak or Courant, where real numbers are described either as infinite decimals with a certain equivalence relation, or axiomatically as an ordered field. In this last case, everything is precisely defined and every theorem is proved.

Now I think most people call the last approach "analysis" rather than calculus, but some of us actually were introduced to calculus by such an approach and hence do not know what others mean when they say "calculus".

Can you say a bit about what a 10th grader in Australia would learn about calculus? E.g. would he/she see the mean value theorem proved assuming a continuous function has a maximum on a closed bounded interval? Would he/she see proved that (more difficult) preliminary result? Or would one just rely on a picture as in Thompson, to conclude that the slope is zero at a maximum?

Would he/she see a rigorous definition of the sine, cosine and exponential functions using infinite series? I would think not, but that is how they were presented in my first (college honors) calculus course. Would one just assume the properties of trig functions from a (non rigorous) trig course, as in both Thompson and apparently even Courant?

Come to think of it I actually once taught a high school short course (elaborating an exercise from Spivak) on rigorous real numbers as infinite decimals, proving all the axioms for an Archimedean ordered field hold for them; moreover some students were 10th graders, so I know it can be done. (only 57 more posts to go.)

I quite like the idea. by the way, that in Australia one need not complete years and years of college to get a useful practical degree and job related training.
 
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  • #44
mathwonk said:
I always wonder what it means to "do calculus", in say the 9th grade. The hard concept is mainly the definition of "completeness" the real numbers, and without such a definition one cannot prove the existence of the things calculus is designed to find, such as maxima and minima, and areas of curved regions.

So does such an early calculus course just assume the real numbers are in one to one correspondence with the points of an intuitive continuous "number line", or perhaps even state that they are represented by infinite decimals, or (unlikely) give the axioms for them as an Archimedean ordered field?

Are limits introduced in an intuitive way, or are they defined carefully? If they are defined, are basic facts about them proved, such as the limit of a product is the product of the limits, or maybe that the limit represented by the infinite decimal .9999... is 1?

I.e. one can teach "calculus" roughly along the lines of Calculus made easy, by Silvanus P. Thompson, where nothing at all is defined precisely and nothing is proved, (and several erroneous statements are made), but numerous examples in using calculus techniques are illustrated;

or along the lines of say George Thomas's early books, where some rigor is given but as I recall real numbers are a bit cavalierly treated and basic existence theorems are not proved, but many useful practical methods are taught;

or one can teach it as presented in Spivak or Courant, where real numbers are described either as infinite decimals with a certain equivalence relation, or axiomatically as an ordered field. In this last case, everything is precisely defined and every theorem is proved.

Now I think most people call the last approach "analysis" rather than calculus, but some of us actually were introduced to calculus by such an approach and hence do not know what others mean when they say "calculus".

Can you say a bit about what a 10th grader in Australia would learn about calculus? E.g. would he/she see the mean value theorem proved assuming a continuous function has a maximum on a closed bounded interval? Would he/she see proved that (more difficult) preliminary result? Or would one just rely on a picture as in Thompson, to conclude that the slope is zero at a maximum?

Would he/she see a rigorous definition of the sine, cosine and exponential functions using infinite series? I would think not, but that is how they were presented in my first (college honors) calculus course. Would one just assume the properties of trig functions from a (non rigorous) trig course, as in both Thompson and apparently even Courant?

Come to think of it I actually once taught a high school short course (elaborating an exercise from Spivak) on rigorous real numbers as infinite decimals, proving all the axioms for an Archimedean ordered field hold for them; moreover some students were 10th graders, so I know it can be done. (only 57 more posts to go.)

I quite like the idea. by the way, that in Australia one need not complete years and years of college to get a useful practical degree and job related training.
First, I’m not sure there is any likelihood that a first college course in calculus is necessarily better on these points than one in high school. The problem is not the age of the student but attitudes on what a ‘first course ‘ in calculus should be like.

However, as an exercise I pulled out the book I used to self teach calculus in 10th grade (never took a course in it, just self taught, getting 5 on BC exam in 10th grade, which exam was never before offered by my rural school).

1) A rigorous definition of completeness of the reals is given on page 10 of the first chapter. Limits are very carefully defined and used in all proofs.

2) Real numbers are defined via infinite decimals, then the axioms of an archimedean ordered field are developed (without using the term).

3) Your preliminary result on a continuous function of a closed interval having a maximum and minimum is discussed, presented as an important theorem relying on previously introduced notions of completeness of reals and rigorous limit definitions, but the full proof is left for a future course. Many issues and subtleties are presented in the text and exercises, but the full proof is deferred. Given this one cop out, the other related results you mention are rigorously proved (slope being zero at a maximum, Rolle’s theorem, then mean value theorem, extended theorem of the mean).

4) trig functions were defined in terms of a unit circle as functions of reals, with all properties derived from definitions, including properties of their derivatives. Later, infinite series for them were derived. Arguably, the notion of a unit circle is not developed with full rigor.

fyi, the book was “calculus and analytic geometry” by Fisher and Ziebur.
 
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  • #45
Thanks, yes that was considered a good book in my day (by me). My guess is your self taught course excels what many high school courses offer. I myself was not offered calculus in high school, (and did not study it myself), indeed I did not even learn trig. Upon entering college I was enrolled in a Spivak type calculus course, but unfortunately that was several years before the book by Spivak was available, so every 9am lecture I missed was lost material. About one year later I was out working in a factory, and wondering what had gone amiss.

By the way, many years later, I observed the following proof (much improved by a brilliant colleague) of the basic theorem omitted from Fisher and Ziebur and most other books. Let f be defined on the closed interval [0,1], and consider its values on each of the subintervals, [0, .1], [.1, .2], ...,[.9, 1], of length 1/10. Since you say your book defined the notion of complete ordered field I assume it defined a "least upper bound", i.e. a number that is an upper bound of a given set and yet no smaller number is. the fundamental axiom of the reals is that every non empty subset of reals has a least upper bound, which is either infinity if the set is unbounded above, or is a finite real number if the set has a finite upper bound.

Subdivide the interval [0,1] into smaller intervals of length 1/10. Then choose such a subinterval, say [.4, .5], such that the least upper bound of the values of f on this subinterval is as large as that on any other such subinterval. Hence if there is a maximum value of f on [0,1], it must occur in this subinterval [.4, .5]. Then assign the first decimal place of our desired maximum to be .4.

Now subdivide the interval [.4, .5] further into subintervals of length 1/100, and choose one, say [.43, .44] where again the least upper bound of f is at least as high as that on any other such subinterval. If there is a maximum of f on [0,1], then again it must occur in this subinterval. Thus the first two decimal places of our desired maximum point are .45.

Continuing, we obtain an infinite decimal of form c = .43xxxx..., hence a real number in [0,1], and it is a straightforward exercise in the definition of continuity to show that, if f is continuous at c, then the finite real number f(c) is a maximum for the values of f on the whole interval [0,1]. In particular f is bounded by a finite real number on [0,1] and does in fact attain a finite maximum at some point of [0,1].

Now why would such a simple proof be omitted from a college calculus course? Notice it only requires the knowledge that an infinite decimal does define a real number, plus the definition of continuity, things which supposedly are included in the course. (One easily extends this proof to the case of f defined on any closed bounded interval [a,b], by sending [0,1] to [a,b], by t --> a + t.(b-a), and composing this map with f.)
 
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  • #46
mathwonk said:
thanks, yes that was considered a good book in my day (by me). my guess is your self taught course excels what many high school courses offer. I myself did not have calculus in high school, (and did not study it myself), indeed I did not even learn trig. Upon entering college I was enrolled in a Spivak type calculus course, but unfortunately that was several years before the book by Spivak was available, so every 9am lecture I missed was lost. About one year later I was out working in a factory, and wondering what had gone amiss.
A funny part of my story was how difficult it was to convince my parents to get me a calculus textbook for my birthday toward the end of 9th grade (I had picked it visiting the nearest real library by bus and comparing texts as to apparent completeness of explanation and number of exercises, both with and without solutions given). It took weeks of persuasion that this was what I really wanted, and nothing else would do. They just didn’t accept that a math textbook was an appropriate birthday gift.
 
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  • #47
I think you chose very well. That book was not as well known as many others, such as Thomas, but was excellent. As parent stories go, my mom wanted me to practice the piano and be the next Liberace. Instead I was reading Theory of Sets, at the nearby university library, by Erich Kamke. Funny how you never forget those formative sources, even 60+ years later.
 
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  • #48
mathwonk said:
Thanks, yes that was considered a good book in my day (by me). My guess is your self taught course excels what many high school courses offer. I myself was not offered calculus in high school, (and did not study it myself), indeed I did not even learn trig. Upon entering college I was enrolled in a Spivak type calculus course, but unfortunately that was several years before the book by Spivak was available, so every 9am lecture I missed was lost material. About one year later I was out working in a factory, and wondering what had gone amiss.

By the way, many years later, I observed the following proof (much improved by a brilliant colleague) of the basic theorem omitted from Fisher and Ziebur and most other books. Let f be defined on the closed interval [0,1], and consider its values on each of the subintervals, [0, .1], [.1, .2], ...,[.9, 1], of length 1/10. Since you say your book defined the notion of complete ordered field I assume it defined a "least upper bound", i.e. a number that is an upper bound of a given set and yet no smaller number is. the fundamental axiom of the reals is that every non empty subset of reals has a least upper bound, which is either infinity if the set is unbounded above, or is a finite real number if the set has a finite upper bound.

Subdivide the interval [0,1] into smaller intervals of length 1/10. Then choose such a subinterval, say [.4, .5], such that the least upper bound of the values of f on this subinterval is as large as that on any other such subinterval. Hence if there is a maximum value of f on [0,1], it must occur in this subinterval [.4, .5]. Then assign the first decimal place of our desired maximum to be .4.

Now subdivide the interval [.4, .5] further into subintervals of length 1/100, and choose one, say [.43, .44] where again the least upper bound of f is at least as high as that on any other such subinterval. If there is a maximum of f on [0,1], then again it must occur in this subinterval. Thus the first two decimal places of our desired maximum point are .45.

Continuing, we obtain an infinite decimal of form c = .43xxxx..., hence a real number in [0,1], and it is a straightforward exercise in the definition of continuity to show that, if f is continuous at c, then the finite real number f(c) is a maximum for the values of f on the whole interval [0,1]. In particular f is bounded by a finite real number on [0,1] and does in fact attain a finite maximum at some point of [0,1].

Now why would such a simple proof be omitted from a college calculus course? Notice it only requires the knowledge that an infinite decimal does define a real number, plus the definition of continuity, things which supposedly are included in the course. (One easily extends this proof to the case of f defined on any closed bounded interval [a,b], by sending [0,1] to [a,b], by t --> a + t.(b-a), and composing this map with f.)
Actually, the form of theorem they omitted proof of was more general. That if f is a continuous function on [a,b], then its range over this closed interval is some closed interval [A,B]. This includes, as immediate corollaries, that it has a maximum and minimum (B and A, respectively, and possibly the same).
 
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  • #49
yes, pardon me, the proof i gave yields half of that result almost immediately, with my c equal to your B. Replacing f by -f gives the existence of a minimum, say d, for f. Then the image interval is at least contained in [d,c].

The theorem they stated is actually the composition of two basic results, the other one being the intermediate value theorem, i.e. the continuous image of an interval is an interval, which strengthens this theorem to show that the continuous image of a closed bounded interval is a closed bounded interval.

Their statement is actually less general than this however, since in fact the continuous image of any interval is an interval, not just that of a closed bounded interval. However, it is true that their more restricted theorem can be used to prove the more general theorem about the continuous image of any interval, since in any interval where f changes sign, we can choose two points a,b where it does so and apply the restricted theorem to [a,b].

One can give a similar elementary argument for the IVT. Namely it suffices to show that if f is continuous on [0,1] and is negative at 0 and positive at 1, then at some intermediate point c, we have f(c) = 0. Just subdivide again and choose a subinterval such that f changes signs at the endpoints of the subinterval...continue and get a point c where f changes sign at the endpoints of infinitely many subintervals shrinking to c, hence by continuity at c, f(c) = 0.

My point is that there are two general concepts which are proved differently but which they are conflating in their statement. I.e. the continuous image of every closed and bounded set is closed and bounded, and the continuous image of every interval is an interval, but there are many closed and bounded sets which are not intervals, and many intervals which are neither closed nor bounded. Since they omit the proofs, this is not made clear. (In abstract topology these concepts are called compactness and connectedness. Then the continuous image of a compact set is compact and the continuous image of a connected set is connected.)

I must say however that since they are not giving the proofs, their choice of a combined statement seems an intelligent and useful one.
 
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  • #50
@mathwonk , I like your proofs because they are constructive in flavor. What I encountered later, were proofs of generalizations of these theorems beyond reals (e.g. arbitrary compact sets, connected sets, etc.). These proofs were all nonconstructive proofs by contradiction.
 
  • #51
I agree with you 100% about the constructive proofs being more persuasive. It seems there are 2 ways of doing calculus rigorously, either assuming the reals are represented by infinite decimals, or just assuming they form an ordered field with the least upper bound property. This second approach is much more abstract but is apparently favored by the experts as being cleaner and slicker for giving proofs. We ordinary people however who like to see real numbers concretely are more persuaded by the actual process of constructing a solution to our problem. The contrast is between exhibiting a concrete reasonably familiar model for the real numbers, as opposed to just stating axioms they should satisfy, without convincing us these axioms are reasonable. I.e. the abstract approach does not even consider the question of whether the reals actually exist. The tedious method of Dedekind cuts to construct them (as in Rudin) is also quite painful in my opinion. This is the contrast betwen representing a number c either in terms of the decimal expansion for c, or in terms of the entire (rational) part of the real axis lying to the left of c!

The most popular books for rigorous calculus, Spivak and Apostol, (as well as the less available but excellent books by Lang, Analysis I, and by Kitchen, Calculus of one variable), do things the abstract axiomatic way, and so did my intro college course, but the remarkable book by Courant does things using infinite decimals. Fortunately Courant was recommended reading for my course. To be sure Courant quickly ramps up and uses infinite decimals to prove an abstract property, the principle of the point of accumulation (every infinite subset of a closed bounded set must accumulate, or bunch up, about at least one point). Even this principle however is more concrete to me than a bare axiom, especially since it can be easily proved by subdividing intervals as in the proofs above.

It seems we are mostly given two types of presentations nowadays, either no proof at all of basic facts about limits in calculus, or abstract proofs based on axioms for the reals. I think many more people could be introduced to rigorous calculus if the constructive infinite decimal approach were more common.

I wonder what the common core approach to calculus is?

Edit: Well I just read the calculus chapter of the 2013 California standards for high school math. The first sentence is :

"When taught in high school, calculus should be presented with the same level of depth and rigor as are entry-level college and university calculus courses."

I think this is neither entirely meaningful, nor convincing. I.e. entry level (i.e. freshman) calculus courses throughout the country vary from completely intuitive ones to math 55 at Harvard, the "hardest course in America", apparently taken mainly by people who have already been Olympiad fellows. Moreover the whole advantage to taking a hard subject early is to have an easier, slower, introduction to it that will help later when a more rigorous version is encountered. In spite of the language in this chapter, my experience is that high schools tend to spend roughly twice as much time on an intro calc course as does a college course, even a non honors one. So do they mean "at the same depth", but twice as slowly?

The description given suggests the real model for the CA course is the AP test. To be fair, it also matches closely what is usually offered to non honors students in most non elite colleges, namely a course that states but does not prove the fundamental theorems underlying the calculus, the intermediate value and extreme value theorems, which we have just seen can be rigorously proved in a way that even high schoolers could easily grasp.

One thing which is taken for granted, but seems to me questionable, is the idea that a calculus course can be given at the same level as a college course when the high school teacher giving it has usually nowhere near the same training in math as a college teacher. I.e. even in top ranked private high schools of my acquaintance, calculus could be taught by anyone who had taken calculus in college, whereas in college it is often taught either by a graduate PhD student or, frequently, a professor with mathematical research experience. A quick look at my vita shows over 40 first year calculus courses taught in the 30 years after receiving the PhD, and it is incomplete.
 
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  • #52
I looked at the article and admit I find it somewhat depressing that parents are struggling with understanding that a number like 43 means we have 43 separate items that are grouped into 4 sets with 10 things in each set plus 3 remaining single times. They are just asking us to realize that the '4' stands for 4 tens and the '3' stands for 3 ones. In particular if we add 7 more we get enough single items to make another ten, so it becomes 5 tens and no ones, or 50. But people are complaining "don't tell me that! just let me write 7+3 as 10 and the '1' adds to the '4'! That's all I need to know how to do! I don't want to understand why it works."

Believe me, I had to teach this class, and it was brutal. Some of those students, all of them future teachers, were pretty resistant (not all by any means), and it showed on your class evaluations. At the end I got the worst evaluations I had ever had. One of my friends who had taught it the semester before asked to see mine with a smile of anticipation on his face. When he read my terrible evaluations, he looked at me and said "actually, those aren't so bad." I felt sorry for him.
 
  • #53
Another place I encountered a difference of approach was in multiplication. My class had only been told that multiplication is repeated addition, so they had trouble grasping how to multiply numbers that are not integers. I.e. is sqrt(2)x pi equal to sqrt(2) added to itself pi times? I myself always looked at multiplication as area, i.e. 2x3 is the area of a rectangle with base 2 and height 3, so sqrt(2)xpi is the area of a rectangle with base sqrt(2) and height pi. This seemed foreign to even the professors they had studied with. But I just saw this approach to multiplication yesterday on the internet in a Montessori class for kindergarteners, using rods. What gives?

One way to deal with equal ratios is in terms of area, since a/b = c/d is the same as ad = bc, or the area of the rectangle with sides a,d has same area as that with sides b,c. This principle appears already in Euclid, in Prop. III.35, where he shows that two triangles formed in a circle by intersecting two secants, hence with equal corresponding angles, have equal ratios in this sense of area. In my opinion, the damage that has been done by not teaching from Euclid for the last 100 years is really enormous.

Here is another little tidbit from geometry. Some modern books on geometry illustrate the fact that two triangles with the same corresponding sides are congruent by making a triangle from three straws with a thread running through them, and observing that the triangle is rigid, in the sense that you cannot change the angles without breaking the straws or the string.

This nice and hands on, but ignores the fact that rigidity of a figure only shows that there is no family of congruent figures all nearby, to which it can be continuously deformed. It does not show there might not be another congruent figure some distance away which can only be reached by a discrete motion, breaking the figure and reassembling it. E.g. if this principle were enough, then SSA would be sufficient for two triangles to be congruent, since fixing two adjacent sides and an angle not contained between them, allows exactly two different triangles in general (as long as the angle is not 90 degrees). They are not congruent, but neither can be continuously deformed into the other.
 
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  • #54
mathwonk said:
That's all I need to know how to do! I don't want to understand why it works."
Unfortunately that is a common theme I am many areas of people's lives these days. I will admit there are many times this is acceptable. After all, we can't be experts at everything. But to be unwilling to accept or learn something as simple as the math example @mathwonk gave depresses me.
 
  • #55
mathwonk said:
That's all I need to know how to do! I don't want to understand why it works."
I have had a couple opportunities to "help" children of friends with their homework. And it was not easy to figure out how they had been taught to do the multiplication and the division. The "format" was just so different than the traditional algorithms I learned in grade school ("borrow from the nine," and "carry the two"). Once I deciphered the new method, it is of course obvious what they are doing. I think most people here on PF get it, and see how the new approach could be less mysterious than the old, and is probably "deeper" somehow.

But - the kids I dealt with did not look at this as anything other than an algorithm. They had been taught to draw out these groups of boxes and what goes in each box. Very mechanical, no less so than the traditional method. "That's all I need to know." Grade school "math" homework is still seen as a chore.
 
  • #56
Probably these kids are smarter than I am in a sense, with their agile young brains and good memories, but I admit that now in my old age, I sometimes forget the algorithm for subtracting and borrowing, and it helps me to rethink that when I borrow one from the tens column, that is really a batch of ten ones. More meaningful for me, it is like opening a sixpack, and having one less one carton, but six more bottles.

When I taught it, I tried to make games like that, where kids would write 43 to represent 4 six-packs and 3 extra bottles of soft drink. Or if a case held 4 six packs, and we were also using cases, then we would write 103 for one case, no loose six-packs, and 3 extra bottles.

But it was a struggle, between - "lets understand this, it can be fun", and -" let's just get through this, I hate it". And those were future teachers. The challenge is keep the fun in.
 
  • #57
mathwonk said:
More meaningful for me, it is like opening a sixpack, and having one less one carton, but six more bottles.
I don't remember Miss Runcible explaining "borrow the one" that way. Who says math can't be fun?
 
  • #58
mathwonk said:
I always wonder what it means to "do calculus", in say the 9th grade.

That I would call real analysis - not calculus which is more intuitive in its approach. The intuition is the intuitive idea of limit - although some approaches ask students to think of dy and dx as numbers so small, that for all practical purposes are zero, but are not zero. And most certainly dy or dx squared can be neglected.

mathwonk said:
Can you say a bit about what a 10th grader in Australia would learn about calculus? E.g. would he/she see the mean value theorem proved assuming a continuous function has a maximum on a closed bounded interval? Would he/she see proved that (more difficult) preliminary result? Or would one just rely on a picture as in Thompson, to conclude that the slope is zero at a maximum?

Ok - first until very recently here in Queensland Australia we stared grade 1 at 5 so 10th grade in the US (and now here) would correspond to 11th grade when I did it. Also calculus is formally taught here in Aus in grade 11 and 12 - we combine calculus and pre-calculus together. We do not cover the intermediate value theorem etc - but stop at L-Hopital. It is very similar to IB HL math (have a look at the table of contents):
https://www.haesemathematics.com/books/mathematics-analysis-and-approaches-hl

Many schools have for good students an accelerated math program where they start grade 11 and 12 math in grade 10, leaving year 12 for university math subjects taught at your school. That would be starting in grade nine in the US system. That came in a bit after I finished so an accelerated program did not apply to me. Hence I can speak from experience on what the equivalent of a 10th grader would learn about calculus. It was all done on the intuitive idea of a limit eg the idea of instantaneous speed as you make the time period smaller and smaller so it effectively becomes zero. No real analysis - that was left to university first year. People hated it (I loved it personally) so was dropped as a requirement, hence some more applied math types never even took it - but did get a sort of an idea about things like the GLB axiom etc. Here is a typical first year university calculus subject here in Aus for those that did calculus at HS:
https://handbook.unimelb.edu.au/subjects/mast10006

If you were to stop at grade 10 you would probably learn something similar to IB SL:
https://www.haesemathematics.com/books/mathematics-analysis-and-approaches-sl

But good students would complete the full HL syllabus starting grade 9.

mathwonk said:
I quite like the idea, by the way, that in Australia one need not complete years and years of college to get a useful practical degree and job related training.

So does the government - it is worried far too many people think going to uni is the only route to a successful career. I think they want everyone who can to eventually reach university level in their knowledge - but you can do that while working and taking courses along the way to increase your knowledge. Also you often learn a huge amount on the job in many professions/careers. For example you can do a number of what are called Graduate Certificates with just a Diploma (equivalent to an associate degree in the US) and some work experience eg:
https://www.griffith.edu.au/study/degrees/graduate-certificate-in-finance-3266#entry-requirements

Upon completion you get credit for those subjects and then complete a Masters (if you wish).

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #59
hmmm27 said:
12x12, late '60s... maybe the excuse for stopping at 10x10 is that "dozen" is now considered archaic ?

Meh, make them go to 16x16 to be modern.
Yes, I learned them in the sixties I think circa 1962 4th grade, when my brother was born as I recall reciting them to my mom in the hospital.

The push to teach about money and the metric system may have influenced teachers to stop at 10x10. I do remember special cases like 12x12 is 144 or things x 10 as extensions of the table.

Another influence was the so-called Sputnik Crisis where the US needed more engineers to compete with the Russians And so developed the New Math curriculum featuring Set Theory, module numbers...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Math
 
  • #60
Greg Bernhardt said:
My wife teaches 3,4,5 year olds. She needs to know calculus why? My wife has noted a common issue is that teachers teach how they were taught. This leads to generational stagnation and stubborness. Why we are teaching the same we did 50 years ago blows my mind.
Well, one answer is "why not?" if it works. Is there some reason to think the today's children learn differently than children 100 years ago? I recall the experience of looking at a calculus textbook in French from circa 1725 (in a rare book library) and noting that despite not knowing word of French, it was easy to follow because the order of presentation and notation were already similar to what I learned. My thought was not "oh how terrible", but "wow, so much of how to teach this was worked out in a matter of decades from first discovery".
 
  • #61
PAllen said:
Well, one answer is "why not?" if it works. Is there some reason to think the today's children learn differently than children 100 years ago?
"If it works" is the issue. We know more now about how people learn compared to what we knew 100 years ago, and it makes sense to change how students are taught in light of this new knowledge. For example, studies consistently show that the most relevant factor in improving student learning in introductory astronomy is the amount of interactive learning in class. So rather than having a class that consists of the professor lecturing for 50 minutes, you might have a class consisting of sequences of a short lecture focused on a particular topic and then an activity or two where students work with the ideas they were just introduced to. Yet many professors still stick with straight lecture, where students take a passive role, because that's what they're familiar with, i.e., that's how they were taught.
 
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  • #62
vela said:
Yet many professors still stick with straight lecture, where students take a passive role, because that's what they're familiar with, i.e., that's how they were taught.

In fairness, it's not just something they're familiar with, it's something that they were able to use to master the subject. They know for a fact that a student can become a world expert in the material from this teaching method.
 
  • #63
PAllen said:
Well, one answer is "why not?" if it works. Is there some reason to think the today's children learn differently than children 100 years ago?
I spent a lot of time on my smartphone in the late 1970s when I was graduating high school and going through undergrad and doing my MSEE. Oh wait...

I very much approach my work differently currently with instant access to the Internet, and have recycled all of my databooks and most of my textbooks, and instead look up the information I need in less than 5 seconds by pulling my cellphone off my hip.

Yes, today's children are learning differently, and I don't think it's a bad thing. As long as they truly learn and learn how to use Internet resources to find information more quickly.

vela said:
"If it works" is the issue. We know more now about how people learn compared to what we knew 100 years ago, and it makes sense to change how students are taught in light of this new knowledge. For example, studies consistently show that the most relevant factor in improving student learning in introductory astronomy is the amount of interactive learning in class.
And we have found through the last school cycle how significant the impact has been on many students to trying to adapt to distance learning. And even for the teachers -- locally I've seen news reports by teachers who are trying as hard as they can to get back to in-person learning because they've seen the shortcomings in their students when they came back to the classrooms lately.
 
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  • #64
vela said:
"If it works" is the issue. We know more now about how people learn compared to what we knew 100 years ago, and it makes sense to change how students are taught in light of this new knowledge. For example, studies consistently show that the most relevant factor in improving student learning in introductory astronomy is the amount of interactive learning in class. So rather than having a class that consists of the professor lecturing for 50 minutes, you might have a class consisting of sequences of a short lecture focused on a particular topic and then an activity or two where students work with the ideas they were just introduced to. Yet many professors still stick with straight lecture, where students take a passive role, because that's what they're familiar with, i.e., that's how they were taught.
Absolutely, and traditional schooling did not work for me. I only clicked into gear once I got to college. Having kids sit in desks, quiet, raise their hand to say something, then do 50 home sheets at home is not developmentally appropriate, inventive, or effective. I once had an algebra class where the teacher worked problems on an overhead projector for 45min in a monotone voice every single day. Is that the best we got?
 
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  • #65
Greg Bernhardt said:
I once had an algebra class where the teacher worked problems on an overhead projector for 45min in a monotone voice every single day. Is that the best we got?
I certainly had those kinds of teachers, but I had more animated teachers in my honors classes who more or less left it up to us to teach ourselves. In math and science classes, we were given examples of types of problems, and then we were left to generalize and solve more complex problems.

I hired a student at my office and he went on to major in math at Harvard. Some of his work in high school was more advanced than I remember, but then he was one of a handful of students. As I recall, he was valedictorian, or co-valedictorian. My kids went to the same high school, but they were not exposed to the same rigorous math program, and in fact my kids struggled with math, which seemed less advanced than what I studied in high school. Certainly, education, like health care, is inconsistently provided across the nation. Far too many children/youth get left behind.

mathwonk said:
or along the lines of say George Thomas's early books, where some rigor is given but as I recall real numbers are a bit cavalierly treated and basic existence theorems are not proved, but many useful practical methods are taught;
I used this text in high school. I actually purchased a copy probably around 10th grade because I was interested in learning calculus, and at the time, it was not taught at the high school I was attending. I changed high schools between 10 and 11th grades, and it turned out that calculus was taught at the second high school, and the program used Thomas, but are different edition.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_B._Thomas

I also had a copy of the CRC Standard Mathematical Tables and Formulae, from about 1972-3. I was intrigued by the tables of integrals and the geometry and trigonometry.

berkeman said:
watching TV at home one night when the "Beverley Hillbillies" TV show
This reminded me of Jethro doing his ciphering or go's-intos. :oldbiggrin:
 
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  • #66
Greg Bernhardt said:
I once had an algebra class where the teacher worked problems on an overhead projector for 45min in a monotone voice every single day. Is that the best we got?
That's bad teaching in anybody's book. It's not necessarily a result of educational policy.
 
  • #67
Office_Shredder said:
In fairness, it's not just something they're familiar with, it's something that they were able to use to master the subject. They know for a fact that a student can become a world expert in the material from this teaching method.
It would be more accurate to say they know that some students like them can become experts. But what about everybody else?
 
  • #68
vela said:
It would be more accurate to say they know that some students like them can become experts. But what about everybody else?

That's why I said *a* student, not *all* students.

My point here is you're not asking this professor to do something different from what they have simply seen someone do before, you're telling them that the thing they went through that was very successful for them, is not actually good. They have a deeply personal experience of this old system working, and zero experience of the new thing working. It is not a trivial thing as a human, to make that adjustment.
 
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  • #69
Office_Shredder said:
That's why I said *a* student, not *all* students.

My point here is you're not asking this professor to do something different from what they have simply seen someone do before, you're telling them that the thing they went through that was very successful for them, is not actually good. They have a deeply personal experience of this old system working, and zero experience of the new thing working. It is not a trivial thing as a human, to make that adjustment.
I taught statistics. I thought the methods were archaic, relics of the precomputer age that survived due to laziness and tradition. The students hated learning this meaningless stuff.

I guess the idea is to test the ability of the student to memorize and apply arbitrary complicated routines. That;s what they'll be doing if they can get a white color job. In that way it makes sense.
 
  • #70
Greg Bernhardt said:
teachers teach how they were taught. This leads to generational stagnation and stubborness. Why we are teaching the same we did 50 years ago blows my mind.
Some basic things simply don't change - ever. Certainly, if something works, keep using it. If there is a better method that teaches more efficiently, then by all means, use that method.

I'm trying to remember how I learned math along the way, and why 50 years later, there seems to be little progress with learning in grades 4-12, i.e., the majority of kids still struggle with math, and many do not learn calculus in high school. There are the odd few % who do however.

I've interviewed college seniors who couldn't write/communicate much better than 8th graders, or whose math abilities were rather limited. At the same time, I've worked with high school seniors and undergrads who were brilliant programmers and problem solvers.

When I was in high school learning geometry and trigonometry, I was wondering why were were not taught it in elementary school, and similarly about matrices and matrix algebra. I was exposed to matrices in 5th grade, but were really didn't make the connection with simultaneous equations, and we were limited to 2x2 and 3x3, and basic properties. Then I didn't do matrices until later in high school (again limited) and university.

In high school, I learned dot product and cross product, but not inner and outer products, so when I got to university, I had to learn new terminology. Most high school students didn't even get the basic exposure I did, not until university. So teachers (are people) and teaching are not consistent.
 

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