Since “normal” kids are the vast majority of the students in public schools what you’re claiming is every public school has a subpar math program. I don’t know. |
Yes, every US public school has a subpar math program. You can see that internationally. |
Yes. Yes they do |
DP. The data says "many" (or possibly "most") but not "every". As with anything else, exceptions must exist here or there in any large country like the USA. The NAEP math results and PISA math results each show that the US (nationally) is poor at teaching math. Of course, some schools in the US will be better, and some worse, but our national average results for math knowledge can only be called poor. |
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Our kids school seems ok at introducing math concepts, but they do not have the students practice enough math problems to really memorize the methods being taught.
For us "supplement" is not acceleration. It is reinforcement -- just giving them sufficient practice at home working math problems. This way they can do the math reliably and correctly -- every time - without confusion. |
There is so much added value in having an actual text book. Copying the problems from the book on to paper helps with organization. They learn to both copy accurately, but line numbers up and create and orderly format. Then theirs the actual text. If they are unsure how to do something, they have the text to reference. Parents can also clearly see what problems are supposed to be done and the methods they are being taught- so they can help their students. It’s an absolute travesty that text books have been cut out |
PP you responded to here I agree with you 100%. I think textbooks are vital. They serve many functions including: providing instruction from subject matter experts that has been professionally edited, and often reviewed by other subject matter experts; explanations and examples that are coordinated with problem sets; and additional study resources such as a glossary, index, selected answers for self checks, etc. Perhaps the most valuable service they provide is that they enable the parent to view the curriculum. This not only makes it easier for parents to help with homework, but it allows them to be informed about deficiencies in the curriculum. When my kids were in elementary, I was constantly frustrated because the school system (which liked to proclaim itself “one of the best school systems in the country) eschewed professionally developed curricula with proven track records in favor of a proprietary curriculum they had developed in-house. It was loosely based on 2 commercial math programs that were so bad that parents were actively protesting them elsewhere, but without the subject matter expertise or professional editing. With no textbooks to review, and when even the tests were considered proprietary and thus were never sent home, most parents had no idea what was actually going on. I still remember when DD had progressed to middle school math where they were finally provided with commercially produced textbooks. When she asked me for help with her homework, I asked her if she had read the explanation preceding the assigned problems. She was astounded when I showed her that not only did the textbook provide an explanation, it also provided examples of sample problems similar to those in her homework. Then her mind was completely blown when I showed her that there were selected answers in the back so she could check her understanding, along with a glossary, and an index. Since the PP that I had responded to was complaining primarily about the workbooks not requiring recopying of the assigned problems, and didn’t mention a lack of instructional material, I assumed (perhaps incorrectly), that the workbook was a supplementary resource to a standard textbook. When I was in school, we always had math textbooks, but while math workbooks weren’t provided, we had plenty of supplementary worksheets. Similarly, in reading, we had spelling textbooks, grammar textbooks, basal readers, and workbooks that were companions to the basal readers. I think textbooks are absolutely essential (Personally, I have a preference for traditional printed formats, but would choose a well-written, mathematically sound e-book over a hard copy that favored pedagogical trends over mathematical content.). If a textbook comes with SUPPLEMENTARY resources, whether that’s as workbooks, videos, games, etc., I may question whether they add any value, but don’t see how they detract anything, as long as the core textbook itself provides strong instruction. |
Fully agree. |
As this president is dismantling the Department of Education. All the states seem to have their own way of teaching it. Maybe there needs to be better federal oversight. I still remember at my school we started mixing grades and had separate teachers for math and French in 4th grade and 5th grades. I started getting stomachaches in 4th grade math. I can still visualize where I sat with my math book and the scary teacher sitting reading magazines at her desk while I struggled. I’m sure there are students today who struggle but are too timid or scared to ask for help. Maybe the teacher taught the concept once and you were out of luck if you didn’t get it. |
| Supplementing is normal now because we live in a relatively well off area where most people have the time a resources to do it. |
Really, it's mainly the Asian countries that score well on those tests. And it's cultural from what I understand. My husband is with State Dept and when doing bidding research, most schools internationally were either American curriculum which is based on common core and there was no apparent path to algebra 1 in MS (and still using Lucy Caulkins reader/writer workshop), or British curriculum which is a bit faster paced but doesn't correspond as easily. |
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]When did this change and why? We did not supplement in the aughts and certainly not in the 90s. [/quote]There are no textbooks. The teachers teach to the SOL. They follow disconnected strands bc of the SOL. They cram info into Sept-April bc they reserve the end of April and May for SOL review and test. Many of the teachers are young and inexperienced. They teach math off of poorly formatted Google slides. It’s all very poorly taught. [/quote]
Dp. This, and kids got homework. Parents helped kids as needed with their homework. They'd check math sent home and explain things kids weren't understanding. Kids don't get homework anymore, or if they do, it's like 5-10 minutes long and inconsistently given. I was doing 30 minutes a day afterschool by 5-6th grade. It was school assigned homework, mostly daily math. [/quote] I don't know anyone whose parents were regularly helping them with HW beyond ES in the 1980s or 90s. |
It is true that Singapore and Taiwan do well on PIsA teats, but Finland and most other European countries also do very well. ALL of those countries do visibly better than the US. We are way way down the PISA results list. If we were middle of the pack, that would be one thing, but we aren't even scoring there. We really are towards the bottom. NAEP is a US-only test, but it also shows poor math scores all across the nation. Common Core curriculum was watered down from prior curricula by the participating states and the education lobby so that all students could pass. |
Way to bring current politics into the discussion... these issues have been pretty prevalent for many years under all administrations - realistically it's a state education issue anyway |
You can’t compare US with other countries- different cultures and attitudes around education, rule following, and parental support. But you can compare the US with itself- and education is undeniable worse than it has been in several decades |