"As a tutor of mathematics here at USD, it breaks my heart when a student says, “I can do math, I just don’t like it.”" notes Seth Gerberding, The Volante.
I can’t necessarily blame them — I too felt that way once upon a time. The way our education system teaches math is sad.
For a country such as the United States to lead the world yet perform so poorly in a crucial skill like math demands pause.
The US ranks 41st in the world in math. That’s behind Vietnam, Latvia and the Slovak Republic.
Why is this?
Well, I don’t hold all the answers, but I think I have a hunch. I’m a
math major in college, but I wasn’t always a math lover. In high
school, my lowest grade was in algebra two. I dragged my feet through
trigonometry, probability, geometry and algebra application for the next
four years. It wasn’t until pre-calculus and calculus that my heart
found room for math.
Normally, it’s the other way around: pre-calculus or calculus usually ends any love between a student and math.
I must give credit to my calculus professor. I tell people that she
was an angel sent to purge our souls of poor math skills. And that she
did. I don’t know exactly what it is she did, but all of sudden all
these concepts from previous years were clicking, and calculus became my
favorite math class (and still is), not to mention my highest math
grade.
My situation is unique, which is a sad state of affairs. I don’t
think it’s the teachers: their jobs are difficult enough as it is. Part
of reason, I believe, is that we teach math as a bunch of rules to
memorize.
The rules are there, but not arbitrarily. I don’t have “rules” in my
head during a test. I think about the strings that connect one theorem
to another. There’s logic, explanations behind the rules that, I’m sorry
to say, we neglect in our education.
Of course, young students are going to prefer languages
to math: those things are fun! Students can be creative in their words
and express their unique thoughts. But that’s the problem: math isn’t
just a bunch of rules made up by the algebra gods at random.
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Source: The Volante