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Math Education In America: Educators And Entrepreneurs Have Ideas To Make It Fun

Math Education

First Posted: 04/11/2012 3:06 pm Updated: 06/11/2012 5:12 am


By Stephanie Simon

April 11 (Reuters) - Pity poor math.

In the American drive to boost science and math education, it's science that has all the kid-friendly sizzle: Robots and roller coasters, foaming chemical reactions, marshmallow air cannons.

Math has... well, numbers.

"America has a cultural problem with math. It's the subject, more than any other, that we as a country love to hate," said Glen Whitney, a passionate mathematician who worked for years developing algorithms for hedge funds. "We don't see it as dynamic. It's rote and boring and done by dead Greek guys a thousand years ago."

A brave group of educators and entrepreneurs think they can change that. With games and competitions, museums and traveling road shows - and a strategic sprinkling of celebrities - they aim to make math engaging, exciting and even fun.

The inaugural Lure of the Labyrinth tournament, designed by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, challenges kids to navigate an online monster lair by solving math and logic puzzles. Top scorers in the competition, which kicked off this month, can win tablet computers.

DimensionU, an online game company, this week launched another national tournament, DU the Math, to encourage kids to play its free math games. Top players can win a personal music lesson from teen pop star Greyson Chance, a day with the hit band Mindless Behavior or a star-studded rock concert in their hometown -- all prizes deliberately chosen, company spokesman Tom Schuyler said, "to make math cool."

Perhaps the most ambitious effort to give math some sparkle comes from Whitney, the hedge-fund mathematician. He has raised $22 million to build a Museum of Mathematics, due to open this fall in New York City.

And yes, he has heard all the jokes.

"Would you rather go to the Museum of Math or the Museum of Broccoli?" Whitney asked. "That's the stereotype we're trying to combat."

To that end, he is sending a traveling exhibit around the country; it is now at the Boonshoft Museum of Discovery in Dayton, Ohio. It includes such marvels as the square-wheeled tricycle, which can be pedaled along a specially designed, geometrically compatible track.

Whitney says he wants visitors to come away with a sense of awe at the power and beauty of mathematics. "Math makes the impossible, possible," he said.


FALLING BEHIND

The new efforts are born of the realization that American students are falling behind in math, even though math skills are more important than ever in careers ranging from manufacturing to healthcare to finance.

American elementary and middle school students score above the international average -- though far below math powerhouses such as Singapore and Japan -- on standardized math tests given worldwide. By age 15, however, U.S. students plunge in ranking, scoring below countries such as Slovenia, Hungary and Iceland. (By contrast, they remain at or above the international average in science and reading.)

The U.S. made a push to bolster math education during the frenzy of the space race in the late 1950s and 1960s. But even in that post-Sputnik era, math was seen as an elite subject, not necessary for the masses. As late as the mid-1980s, most states required just a year or two of math in high school, according to a scholarly review of math education trends by Alan Schoenfeld, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley.

Even today, many high schools don't offer advanced math. In New York City, for instance, just 10 percent of the high schools with the highest black and Latino enrollments offer Algebra II, according to a report by the U.S. Department of Education.

Educators acknowledge part of the problem is the traditional approach to teaching math. Despite periodic stabs at reform, teachers say math classes are often far too heavy on computation drills and formulas, leaving little time for creative problem solving.

"It's as if you took a little kid who really liked music and wanted piano lessons and said, 'We're going to have you practice scales and chords for the next 15 years, and then and only then will we teach you music,'" said Kathy Morris, an education professor at Sonoma State University in California. "It's a soul crusher."


ICE CREAM, NOT BROCCOLI

Morris recently received a $300,000 federal grant to develop better training for math teachers. She says she wants them to get their students thinking of math as the ice cream, not the broccoli, of the school day.

Similar initiatives are underway in other states and nearly every one has adopted new "common core" curricular standards that emphasize reasoning and puzzle-solving, not just computation.

To prepare for that shift, major corporations and philanthropies -- including Google, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Carnegie Corporation of New York -- have pledged $24 million to recruit and train 100,000 new math and science teachers in the next decade.

On a smaller scale, a new geometry book due out this summer, "Girls Get Curves," aims to teach girls math in breezy, teen-magazine-style prose, "so it's not scary and their brains don't freeze up," said author Danica McKellar, an actress known for her starring role on TV's "The Wonder Years." McKellar, a summa cum laude math major at UCLA, already has three top-selling math books to her name, including "Kiss My Math" and "Hot X" (about algebra).

Whether all this will succeed in making math fun has yet to be seen.

When the pop band Mindless Behavior touted the DU the Math tournament on its Facebook page, a few fans gamely said they'd give it a go. But many more gave up at once, posting comments such as "i HATE math" or "me and MATHS ARE ENEMIES!!!"

Yet the new techniques have won a few converts. Dina Cohn, a 13-year-old student in Newton, Massachusetts, said she was lukewarm about math until she joined a local club, Girls' Angle, that explores math concepts in depth, then embeds challenging puzzles into treasure hunts. "I enjoy it more now," she said. "If they did that in school, it would make it more interesting."

While he applauds the tournaments and treasure hunts and most especially the math museum, veteran math teacher J. Michael Shaughnessy says it will take more than good PR to boost math's appeal. It will take a cultural revolution.

Every time he hears a parent tell a child, "I've done fine without math," or "You don't really need to know that," he quietly but urgently interrupts.

"That gives kids permission not to try hard at a subject that's really challenging for everyone," said Shaughnessy, the president of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. "It's doing national damage." (Editing by Jonathan Weber and Christopher Wilson)

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By Stephanie Simon April 11 (Reuters) - Pity poor math. In the American drive to boost science and math education, it's science that has all the kid-friendly sizzle: Rob...
By Stephanie Simon April 11 (Reuters) - Pity poor math. In the American drive to boost science and math education, it's science that has all the kid-friendly sizzle: Rob...
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04:11 PM on 05/23/2012
This article is great. I have taught people of all ages mathematics for years and the best thing to do to make math interesting and engaging is to make it fun! I also believe it is crucial to learn to forget unimportant information in order to remember only the important information. As an educator, I have used my Brainetics system to empower mathematical minds in all types of individuals. It's true, math can fun! But only if you have to the right system and the right mind set!

Mike Byster
www.mikebyster.com
www.brainetics.com
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Christopher Bowen
Author of, Our Kids; Building Relationships in the
11:31 PM on 04/22/2012
In school, you make anything interesting by making it relevant. With younger kids, math problems should be embedded in other subject areas based on what's being read and studied. Multiplication problems are just numbers. But, finding the area of a basketball court may have some meaning in a kid's life. Converting percents to decimals is just numbers, but having someone from the bank come in so the class can figure out how interest compounds over time when you put only a little bit of money away, might catch a kid's attention. It might also makes us all a little smarter with our money.

Chris Bowen
http://teacher2teacher.lacoe.edu/christopher-bowen.aspx
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rewith85man
Expressing Who I Am
08:21 PM on 04/22/2012
If teachers care, students would too.
09:45 AM on 04/20/2012
If something's not entertaining, it seems, Americans have no use for it.
03:01 PM on 04/19/2012
Maybe if we stopped telling children that everything in life should be fun we wouldn't need to make math fun....

and that is ignoring the fact that nearly all subjects in school suck. Who finds English, Spell or Geography fun? I have to wonder why people are not more worried about the boring subjects like those? At least math and science lets you blow stuff up.
08:47 AM on 04/19/2012
Call me a nerd, but I love math. I love the process of finding the right answer. I love the feeling of success when I do find the right answer. I love its uniformity, its neatness, its order. However, I did not love teaching math when I had to do it. I don't understand how people don't "get" math. It's so logical and orderly and simple. It builds on itself, so if you learn how to count, you can add. If you know how to add, you can multiply. If you can mulitply, then you can divide. If you understand the basics of arithmetic, you're going to have no problem with algebra. Then, heck, once you've got your algebra skills down, it's just a hop, skip and a jump to calculus.

The problem is, too many students don't learn basic math skills. And, when you don't have the basics, the more complex skills are almost impossible to develop. I'm disgusted by children who gram a calculator to add. They should be able to do it on paper or even in their heads. Yes, the technology of the calculator has allowed children to find the answer, but they rarely know how they got there or even what that answer means. Then, they walk into my physics class and struggle with basic math functions that we are trying to apply because they have not really learned the math skills to begin with.
03:18 PM on 04/19/2012
Well since kids have 6 + years at least before ever getting near a physics class I would have to say that if kids in your school system can't add they really need to start firing some teachers.

If they didn't understand algebra there is an excuse because most don't have much time with it. Addition and subtraction though...
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tazmodious
Left Hand of Darkness
09:21 PM on 04/17/2012
Why is there this trend in education that everything has to be fun? Sorry, but most of life is not fun. Even a job you really like, will not always be fun. Kids need to understand that sometimes you have to do unfun things to get better at skills. It's not fun practicing scales on a musical instrument, but the process needs to be learned to be a good musician.
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methodman
11:58 PM on 04/16/2012
Another idea that comes to mind is locate a college near where you live and find out if they have a public radio station and if they have like a community interview show. Many times the guest come from different walks of life and can give you interesting ideas you would not have thought of on your own.
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methodman
11:50 PM on 04/16/2012
Part of making math fun is to figure out how to create a paper pop up experience to work out math. They have these pop-up museums. Do some homework into that like Chico State Anthropology department has a program that teaches students how to do this. Math is a language one has to trick themselves to have patience, rolling clay. creating a math paper shop-smith. With interesting paper cuts. Also in the zeal to embrace Computers which I love and can emulate Painting and art mediums real well. But somethings like sculpture is not going to be as fun on a computer unless you have some trial and error experience with real clay. Adults could try like "Make books crazy cubicle projects. The truth is adult life needs to allow creativity for ourselves We will help the kids learn in interesting ways. But we have to learn enough vocabulary for ourselves first. Before we can explain it. Everything is taught well. But if my hands (which they are not!!! can't roll clay smoothly, as a child and I am encouraged to practice it over time it can even my hands and shoulders and bring back normal hand eye coordination. Which goes hand in hand with math. Also things like slide rules may not have been such a smart thing to drop.
02:53 PM on 04/16/2012
There has to be a "payoff" every so often, and elementary physics provides quite a few.
(1) Cavendish's experiment to determine G (grav. constant), in effect finds the MASS OF THE
EARTH! But you need the full force-law equation and the definition of g to get this. (2) Einstein's
gamma factor, runs all through Special Relativity: when velocity v exceeds light-speed, c, gamma
becomes IMAGINARY... ALARM! (3) Lots of work needed to find the polar-equations of the conic
sections, but (calculus) using Newton's law of gravity, these equations appear as the ORBITS! (4) Algebra? the number 1 really has 3 cube-roots -- 2 are imaginary. (Solve x^3 = 1
by factoring, etc.). Extends to nth-order roots, but you need complex numbers (motivation!)
(5) my 9th-grade teacher mentioned to us "in passing" one day that the algebra we used to
solve quatratic equations could be used to solve 3rd, 4th degree eqs., but could NOT solve
5th and higher equations. Deeper theory is needed -- motivation! etc.
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Shain Eighmey
Microbiologist
07:46 AM on 04/16/2012
You know what's not fun? Sitting down and doing math for the sake of doing math. You know what is fun? Doing real world activities that involve math.

Personally, SimCity 2000 gave me a big head start in math as a child because it gave you a reason to want to do math ahead of time. It's amazing how fast you can teach a little kid basic algebra, such as compound interest, if you give them a reason to want to do it.
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see-ellen2001
08:36 PM on 04/14/2012
I get tired of the idea that everything in a kids life must be "fun". If we teach our kids that there are two modes in life-fun and boring-we do them a great disservice. Most kids, when properly encouraged and engaged, enjoy learning. We can engage kids by recognizing the various learning styles that enable the kids to find a way to learn that suits their skill. Some may work better with manipulatives that can represent 'real life' use of numbers vs abstracts. Some may work better pictorially, drawing out a math problem. Others might learn measurement by walking a distance around the school hallways. Fun can be part of it, but should not be all there is.
07:56 PM on 04/15/2012
Very well said
foresure
Brash and Harsh
08:10 PM on 04/14/2012
And what must be something that is strictly taught in teachers’ college. Children never learn though fun or play. Unlike every other young vertebrates they don’t learn by playing, having fun, and mastering skills which provide them rewards.

Of course not. They are motivated by bad grades, and being shamed and bullied in front of their parents.

How do Eskimo children learn to fish, except by getting old copies of Sports Illustrated?

That's why children hate playing games, or sports, or asking "why". Children must be sat down, and explained how to roll a ball, and if they don't understand, take the ball away.

If repetition is boring to the adult, so must it be to the child.

Can you imagine the disaster, if computers were introduced.

Ms. Mudge, whose basically literacy has declined substantially, would have to quit.

Ms. Cutie, the new teacher, who always hated computers, and even hates when her boyfriend uses the computer, would have to quit.

Mr. Hutty, the old chronic alcoholic, who has memorized ever word for every class would have to quit.

Many teachers who would rather have their worn blackboard eraser "pried out of their gnarled cold, dead hands, than learn anything new".

What is so incredibly unfair to teachers is the went into that trade with the expectation that they would never have to learn anything new, or ever take another test after they got licensed.
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Shain Eighmey
Microbiologist
07:53 AM on 04/16/2012
I'll just put it this way. My little cousin can spell the name of every single Pokemon, tell you its statistics, and even go into strategy for building an effective team of them, but apparently he can't spell 10 random words they throw at him every week.

I think it's simply that Nintendo is the better teacher!
foresure
Brash and Harsh
02:29 PM on 04/16/2012
Shain:

Fanned

First, somewhat off the subject.

Because you mentioned micorbiologist.

Check out the internet listing on the solution that a virologist and a computer scientist developed a game to solve a problem in the study of the HIV virus.

As of yesterday, it was the first one if you Google" "Gamification"

They opened the game to the world. No credentials needed. It was solved in three weeks. The results were published with co-authorship of the virologist and an "gamer".

Can you imaging if a clever person converted learning to spell into an interest Pokemon game, your cousin would learn.

I don't know enough about Pokemon, or computer programming or gaming, even to suggest anything. But you know what, I'll bet there is a 20 something out there who could do it.

Or maybe we could ask Herman Cain for advice.

Please bring this up every time the issue of teaching and learning come up.

www. FindYourArtsSchool.com
http://www.findyourartschool.com/ep/video-game-design-colleges.php.

I moved to Florida to go to school. Haven't regretted it, even in August.

I have heard of one school in Winter Park, that appears to have a reputation for high quality and high price. Full Sail University.

I have been hotly flamed by "those in the trenches" for suggesting change. However, a few teachers were very supportive. The smart ones see computers as a method of amplifying their work tremendously.
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tazmodious
Left Hand of Darkness
09:31 PM on 04/17/2012
The new paradigm of making everything fun and easy is doing society a huge disservice. Most of my middle school students cannot tell time on a regular 12hr clock with hands. I know because I don't have a digital clock in my room and they are always asking what the time is even though every student can see the clock. If they can't get cell phones out, they can't figure out what time it is.

Most of my middle school students cannot do simple addition, subtraction, mulitplication and division without a calculator. They do not know their multiplication tables.

This new paradigm to make learning fun and easy is setting these kids up to fail later in life when they learn that life is not fun more often than it is fun.

Musicians will not be good musicians if they skip out on the routine practice that is often not fun, but is essential to being a good musician.
foresure
Brash and Harsh
10:38 PM on 04/17/2012
And computers are the perfect tool for that.

IAs in music, the hardest tasks become easy with practice.

Build on the easy stuff, repeat, and repeat, that is what computers are good for.

When one becomes confident and able, one finds it easy and fun.

Yes, and basically, I agree with what so many teachers are writing, they have accomplished nothing. Children in school get no learning.

Its really a shame that computers don't yet have programs that can turn rote math drills into games. Much easier to do that with typing.

After all computers are so remote from math and graphics that it is impossible to think about a game that could teach addition.

Learning must always be associated with pain and frustration, uncomfortable chairs.

We know that children have no interest in playing games, and figuring things out and competing. Surely those concepts have long been abandoned by the teaching profession who really know that "thought problems", copied onto used papers that refer to slaves picking oranges are the way to go.

Yes I know the problem Fear. Fear of change. Fear of being made obsolete. Fear of having to learn anything new after years in the trenches.

At some point teachers "who have spent their lives in the trenches, realize that they are totally unattainable, and if that is discovered, they may be replaced by R2D2

Of course even if children learn nothing, make no advancement, the teacher is still entitled to her 3-5% raise.
foresure
Brash and Harsh
08:09 PM on 04/14/2012
From what we see of teachers in the classroom they have learned well in their teachers colleges, which are well grounded in the learnings of the 1840’s in Prussia, only eliminating order and structure. Order and structure are dirty, dirty words.

Of course the jargon gets updated ever year or so. Got to be progressive.

Learning must be conducted with children sitting in chairs in long rows. 20 - 50 to a room. The teacher is to stand in front and lecture on the subject.

The instruction of the teacher is always, "hold your question to the end". With a sign, of you "know I am only one person".

Classes should always be conducted for much longer than 20 minutes, which everyone knows is as long as an adult can listen. That way the teacher can practice her bullying skills by forcing the child to sit still.
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tazmodious
Left Hand of Darkness
09:34 PM on 04/17/2012
From what I see from your post, you know nothing at all about how teachers teach in the classroom. Maybe you should step foot in a school one day.
foresure
Brash and Harsh
10:47 PM on 04/17/2012
tazmodious:

Well, there seems to be a consensus among those in the trenches that absolutely nothing regarding the quality of a teacher can be measured. Absolutely beyond the ken of human ability.

Plus teachers keep writing in that, as a matter of fact, that is quite IMPOSSIBLE to teach anything.

Given that teachers can't teach and students won't learn, why are they still accepting 12 months pay for 8.5 months, and demanding more.

It would seem to this observer that 0 proof of accomplishment + 0 proof of learning = ?
foresure
Brash and Harsh
07:44 PM on 04/14/2012
Look the 1% doesn't need more than a few people who can do math at the 8th grade leve.

Even fewer who can actually use math. Most teachers screamed when I said all public school teachers should be able to function in math at the 8th grade level.

I agree that much knowledge just clouds the brain. I even suggested that all teacher be literate to the 12th grade level. That was a non-starter.

What if teachers weren't made to be snobs by pretending to get a college education.

There would be absolutely no change if we allowed bright 9th graders to teach K-5. And bright high school graduates, who actually functioned at the high school level to teach 5-10.

Except for saving a lot of money, and improving the sex live of teachers and students, would it have any effect on educational achivement in this country.

Repeatedly, teachers complain that as a result of the educational system, they really are WORTHLESS.