Lead Wall Street Journal Editorial: Math Wars
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January 4, 2000
Page A22
By Tom Lehrer (1965)
So you've got thirteen
And you take away seven,
And that leaves five...
...Well, six actually
But the idea is the important thing
Reinventing math is an old tradition in this country. It has been around at least since
the 1960's, when the inimitable Tom Lehrer mocked the New Math in Berkeley cafes. Even
Beatniks understood that a method that highlights concepts at the expense of plain old
calculation would add up to trouble. And, as it happened, the New Math's introduction in
schools across the country coincided with the onset of a multi-year decline in math
scores.
Today the original New Math is old hat, but many folks in the education world are hawking
yet another reform. It is known by names like "Connected Math," or
"Everyday Math." Not surprisingly, the New New Math has a lot in common with the
Old New Math. Like its forerunner, it focuses on concepts and theory, scorning textbooks
and pencil-and-paper computation as "rote drill." And like its forerunner,
today's New Math has powerful allies. Education secretary Richard Riley and other
Clintonites smile on it. Eight of the 10 curriculums recently recommended for nationwide
use by an influential Education Department panel teach the New New Math.
Not that all members of the Academy are joining the movement. Within weeks of the
Education Department findings, 200 mathematicians and scientists, including four Nobel
Prize recipients and two winners of a prestigious math prize, the Fields Medal, published
a letter in the Washington Post deploring the reforms. More are now rallying on an
opposition Website, "mathematicallycorrect.com".
And well they might. For programs of the sort picked by the federal panel turn out to be
horrifyingly short on basics.
Consider MathLand, which won a "promising" rating from the panel. Its literature
says it focuses on "attention to conceptual understanding, communication, reasoning
and problem solving." This sounds harmless, but consider: MathLand does not teach
standard arithmetic operations. No carrying and borrowing at the blackboard here. Instead,
children are supposed to meet in small groups and invent their own ways to add, subtract,
multiply and divide. This detour is necessary, the handbook informs, to spare youngsters
the awful subjugation of "teacher-imposed rules." Next comes Connected Math,
another panel favorite. It too skips or glosses over crucial skills. Example: The division
of fractions, an immutable prerequisite for algebra, is absent from its middle-school
curriculum. In shutting the door to algebra, David Klein of Cal State Northridge points
out, "Connected Math also closes doors to careers in engineering and science for its
graduates."
Finally there is Everyday Math. No textbooks here, either. Everyday Math ensures juvenile
dependency to calculators by endorsing their use from kindergarten. Rather than teach long
division, the program devotes substantial time to that important area of math study,
self-esteem. A Grade 5 worksheet asks students to fill in the blanks on the questions
below:
A. If math were a color, it would be_____, because____.
B. If it were a food, it would_______, because_____.
C. If it were weather, it would be_______, because, ______.
We'll allow a pause here for primal screams.
And then move on to the main question: Why? The reason for the New New Math, as for many
other curriculum reforms, is that teachers, school administrators and their unions are
tired of being blamed for statistical declines and poor student performances. So with
math, as in their campaign to dumb down the SAT, such educators work to destroy or reject
the standards that brought them trouble in the first place. Children are different
nowadays, goes the line, and cannot be measured by old benchmarks.
New Mathie and federal panel member Steven Leinwand explains: "It's time to recognize
that, for many students, real mathematical power, on the one hand, and facility with
multidigit, pencil-and-paper computational algorithms, on the other, are mutually
exclusive." Or, as Professor Klein translates: "Underlying their programs is an
assumption that minorities and women are too dumb to learn real mathematics."
Fortunately, America is not France, where a central government controls every aspect of
schooling down to the color of the paper clips. Localities and states write their own
curriculums, and can and do fight back against the New Math. California for example,
reversed a calculator-friendly policy in grammar schools after scores dropped
precipitously. Resource-rich families, too, one suspects will find ways to compensate for
what trendy schools omit. Still, New Math will take its casualties, especially among the
poor, adding to the already mounting costs of the decline in national educational
standards.
For a good website to check out the various math curriculum, see:
http://www.mathematicallycorrect.com