Anonymous wrote:Because acceleration doesn’t work and it doesn’t help students become engineers it actually hurts.
Anonymous wrote:Really rich people don’t need to be advanced in math. Competent, yes, but they don’t need to take calculus as a 10th grader. They don’t become engineers or god forbid computer scientists. If they run a hedge fund, they hire quant nerds to do the hard work while they ski and deal-make with the other lacrosse bros from Dartmouth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can't group privates together, nor can you group publics together. Our kids went to a top private, were doing proofs as juniors. Both are in the highest level math classes at top 10. They were very well prepared WITHOUT tutoring.
DP. Glad it worked well for your kids, but still it is an atypical result overall.
How do you know this? DC is not at a “big3” but is at a well-respected private with a strong math program. None of DC’s friends need outside tutoring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can't group privates together, nor can you group publics together. Our kids went to a top private, were doing proofs as juniors. Both are in the highest level math classes at top 10. They were very well prepared WITHOUT tutoring.
DP. Glad it worked well for your kids, but still it is an atypical result overall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another reason math in the US appears weak on PISA because the US is one of only three countries that doesn't teach the metric system exclusively.
Also we lose potentially good math teachers because students that excel in math go on to work at Microsoft etc and not teach.
Yes, and to other jobs. Teachers salary are very low these days.
Exactly. Smart science and math students have options way better than teaching. In the past, woman really didn’t so smart women would make excellent teachers
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Decades of PISA test results from OECD show that the US is poor at teaching math all across the nation.
Agree. Just thought that a private school would have resources to overcome this limitation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another reason math in the US appears weak on PISA because the US is one of only three countries that doesn't teach the metric system exclusively.
Also we lose potentially good math teachers because students that excel in math go on to work at Microsoft etc and not teach.
Yes, and to other jobs. Teachers salary are very low these days.
Anonymous wrote:You can't group privates together, nor can you group publics together. Our kids went to a top private, were doing proofs as juniors. Both are in the highest level math classes at top 10. They were very well prepared WITHOUT tutoring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Decades of PISA test results from OECD show that the US is poor at teaching math all across the nation.
Do we have a breakdown of PISA test results to compare public vs private?