Exactly. Math has become the backup CS major/practical Liberal arts major. one of the top major at almost every liberal arts college is math. Kinda hard for it to not be this way when all we tell kids is STEM STEM STEM! |
This is the issue. Accelerating 3-4 years should be a rare exception for the truly gifted kids. Not a “track”. |
As technology and careers in STEM involve more skills, it really would be good to start having kids more advanced in math. It's amazing how American colleges can take students underperforming in Math coursework loads to taking graduate level math, but we could catch up with the rest of the west. |
The course title isn't advancement. There's was more depth in algebra 1 when it was a HS class. There was more depth in calc when it was primarily a college course. The race for acceleration is a feedback loop that dumbs things down. |
I don't really see how. Community College professors have no incentive to dumb down Vector Calculus, and they are dedicated teaching faculty which makes them great fits to teach these advanced students. |
Math is popular at small schools, but it works well in seminar settings, and some of the LAC professors are really happy. The people I hear who are upset with the current batch of students are at the big schools. To be clear it's not that the students are flunking out. They do their time, get the degree, they're just joyless to be around. |
Math is already hard. Getting grilled and being forced to really stay disciplined in a seminar of like 8 students makes it even more difficult. I can see why these LACs produce very good liberal arts grads. I did a math degree but outside of my tests, no one really could measure if I knew anything at all (and a fair share of those tests had online communities with solutions). |
Professors have no say, the colleges buy a canned curriculum and hire them to process the scores and answer questions. You end up with a vector calc class where every answer is numeric. It's much cheaper for the schools. |
I didn't grow up in DC, does Dual credit mean something different here? In my home district, you just take the class at the Community college, no changing curriculums. If the class was illegitimate, then that'd be an illegitimate course for their normal students which will hurt them when they transfer... |
Same concept, but online is here to stay. My DC is a math major, his department head said they don’t trust the content knowledge of incoming students (although forced to accept the credits). Specifically mentioned a Bay Area CC. |
It can be a real PITA if the curriculum is very specific to the institution, because those kids will miss key content. For example, at my college, the vector calc class had multiple units on differential forms and you just don’t learn that in 99% of vector calc classes, so the students who missed were bleeding out in subsequent classes. |
Bullcrap. Taking 1 year of calculus in HS is more than enough. -Actual STEM person |
I work in STEM too. It's not that you are incapable of completing a STEM major if you have only Calc AB, but it would be helpful if we gave kids more rigorous content, so they aren't getting steamrolled when they enter freshman year linear for engineering or physics. |
You don't need to take any calculus before linear algebra or real analysis if you are so inclined. |
For those of you bashing CC, it's not like the school curriculums available are that deep either. Most people taking AP BC might benefit from repeating it if they get into a selective math program. I'm not sure what the alternative is for the advanced kids. My kid has maxed out the offerings easily and wants to do more math. I think they should advance as they like if they find it easy, and then retake in college (assuming the math program is harder, which is not the case at all colleges). |