"Racist math" - Most absurd education related thing ever

Rhin0

Senior member
Nov 15, 2004
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http://www2.townonline.com/new...ew.bg?articleid=161257

Mountain: Math curriculum doesn't add up
By Tom Mountain
Wednesday, January 12, 2005

The school department was recently forced to publicly admit that the sixth-grade MCAS math scores have steadily declined over the past three years to the point where 32 percent of sixth-graders are now in the "warning" or "needs improvement" category. This means that if we were to attach a letter grade to these sixth-grade MCAS math results it would be a D-plus, with only 68 percent of the students passing. Brown Middle School fared so poorly that it is now subject to be placed under the federal No Child Left Behind Act for failing to keep pace under the minimum "adequate yearly progress guidelines."

The school department offered no tangible explanation for these declining scores other than to admit that they have no explanation, as articulated by Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction Carolyn Wyatt (salary $106,804), "[The results] have decreased, incrementally, each year and continue to puzzle us." She went on to admit that this downward trend is peculiar to Newton and "is not being seen statewide." Again, she offered no explanation, but she did assure the School Committee that her assistant, Math Coordinator Mary Eich (salary $101,399), is currently investigating the problem.

Unless the current decline in the sixth-grade math MCAS scores is reversed, within four years the rate of passing for sixth-graders will dip below 60 percent. Since the school department has neither an explanation nor a solution to the problem, and since it's likely that these same highly paid administrators will still be in their positions overseeing this problem for which they have neither an explanation nor a solution, there is every reason to assume that this downward trend will continue.

The School Committee, those elected overseers of the school department, offered no instructions, challenges, or demands to those administrators under whose watch this downward trend occurred. The committee members, who are on a first-name basis with these bureaucrats, apparently have an unspoken rule against demanding explanations from their school department friends. Besides, Superintendent Young would never permit his School Committee to publicly challenge his school administrators. So no one was subjected to scrutiny, no one was held accountable, no one was put on notice. The members sat passively and did nothing, just as these bureaucrats expected.

But why have the sixth-grade MCAS scores plummeted in just three years? What mitigating circumstances, such as demographic or economic factors, could have contributed to this downward spiral?

Since Newton has been curiously alone in this decline, surely we can't blame the MCAS itself, especially since the test has hardly changed in just three years. The demographics of the city haven't shifted in so short a period. The socioeconomic level of the population has risen steadily. The school budget has dramatically increased - most notably with an unprecedented override in 2002 - to the point where the budget is at a record high, despite an actual decline in the number of students.

Class size has only recently increased, but mostly at the high schools and only sporadically at the lower grade levels. Since the turnover rate in the school department has always been low, the teachers and principals are roughly the same. We still have the same School Committee, superintendent and mayor.

So then, after eliminating any potential mitigating factors, what could possibly account for the steady decline in the sixth-grade math MCAS scores?

The only logical and remaining explanation is change that occurred in the Newton math curriculum itself - the subject matter of what is taught and how, what is emphasized and what is not, what has been omitted and what is new. In short, what has changed in the elementary and middle school math curriculum to have affected such a dramatic decline in the MCAS scores?

Answer: the new math curriculum, otherwise known as anti-racist multicultural math.

Between 1999 and 2001, under the direction of Superintendent Young and Assistant Superintendent Wyatt, the math curriculum was redesigned to emphasize "Newton's commitment to active anti-racist education" for the elementary and middle schools. This meant that no longer were division, multiplication, fractions and decimals the first priority for teaching math. For that matter, the teaching of math was no longer the first priority for math teachers, as indicated by the new curriculum guidelines, called benchmarks, which function as the primary instructional guide for teaching math in the Newton Public Schools.

In 2001 Mr. Young, Mrs. Wyatt and an assortment of other well-paid school administrators, defined the new number-one priority for teaching mathematics, as documented in the curriculum benchmarks, "Respect for Human Differences - students will live out the system wide core of 'Respect for Human Differences' by demonstrating anti-racist/anti-bias behaviors." It continues, "Students will: Consistently analyze their experiences and the curriculum for bias and discrimination; Take effective anti-bias action when bias or discrimination is identified; Work with people of different backgrounds and tell how the experience affected them; Demonstrate how their membership in different groups has advantages and disadvantages that affect how they see the world and the way they are perceived by others..." It goes on and on.

These are the most important priorities that the school department has determined for teaching math from grade one through eight, as documented in the Newton Public Schools Benchmarks.

Nowhere among the first priorities for the math curriculum guidelines is the actual teaching of math. That's a distant second. To Superintendent Young and his School Committee, mathematical problem-solving is of secondary importance to anti-racist/anti-bias math.

Meanwhile, the sixth-grade MCAS math scores keep going down. Yet the architects of this PC lunacy will sit there with a collective straight face and whine to us that they have no idea why these scores have declined since 2001.

It's interesting that the math curriculum guidelines for Weston, Wayland and Winchester are devoid of any mention of anti-racist math. But then again, those public schools have consistently ranked higher on the MCAS than Newton.

When a school department determines that ideology should take priority over academics, standardized test scores gradually decline and educational standards suffer. It doesn't happen overnight. It takes time for the decline to take its inevitable course.

And inevitable it was. Since 1999, coincidentally the year that Jeffrey Young became superintendent, our schools have plummeted from seventh to 35th in the overall state MCAS rankings. Thus, with the implementation of Mr. Young's ludicrous anti-racist/anti-bias math in 2001, the current dismal scores on the sixth-grade math MCAS should come as no surprise.






This is just insane... This should really help kids out who actually need the math and will need it in higher education. So they have a poor base now and if this is true, they well they are going to be SOL!!!!
 

Rhin0

Senior member
Nov 15, 2004
967
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This one is good too, this one is actually funny:

Are calculus professors racist?: The consequences of Affirmative Action
June 17, 2003
by Chett

Unintended Consequences
Penn State University is really keen on Affirmative Action, for the typical reasons of wanting to level the playing field and the desire to increase diversity. Seemingly paradoxically, racial animus is a real problem on campus. "Seemingly" because the university administration bends over backwards to meet the demands of minority student groups, regardless of whether these demands are illogical or unfair.

What the University doesn't realize is that their "solution"--along with their mollifying attitude--is a big cause of the problem.

The Biased Exam
Case in point is the black Penn Stater who failed a calculus midterm exam, and who then did a quick poll of her black friends and found out most of them failed it as well, whereupon she leveled accusations of racism.

There's just one little problem. The exam was a multiple-choice, computer-scored exam, with the answer key posted that same evening (students keep their test booklets) so folks could check their work and see where they made their mistakes. In other words, no smoke and mirrors in the grading process.

There are only two possible explanations for the racial divide here.

Either the white students (who presumably attended the ultra-top-secret Calculus Reich Aryan Panoply earlier that day) ROFL!!!! had received answer keys prior to the exam, or maybe, just maybe, the students who failed weren't as well prepared (and possibly shouldn't have been taking calculus with their level of math skills).

If a student--who is not ready for college--is accepted into college to meet a diversity quota, the end result in many cases is a student who is much, much more likely to fail out. What happens when you see black students failing calculus (and failing out of school) at higher rates? Charge the university with racism and demand more diversity and sensitivity programs
 

GoingUp

Lifer
Jul 31, 2002
16,720
1
71
both articles are pretty damn good.

and yup, thats what you get when you lower the bar to let in unqualifies students in order to fill quotas to emphasize diversity
 

Rhin0

Senior member
Nov 15, 2004
967
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Originally posted by: BannedTroll
wow....just wow:(


Assuming everything said is true, then yeah- big WOW is right. Pretty disgusted with this. Even if it is half true that is pretty bad.

I'd put this right next to "Social Studies" AKA- watered down "feel-good" history
 

Originally posted by: Rhin0
Originally posted by: BannedTroll
wow....just wow:(


Assuming everything said is true, then yeah- big WOW is right. Pretty disgusted with this. Even if it is half true that is pretty bad.

I'd put this right next to "Social Studies" AKA- watered down "feel-good" history

:roll:

I wonder who we should feel sorry for.... An article is published containing ridiculous claims but no data and sources to backup the claims. Repetitive statements and arguments are made, also known as the fallacy of begging the question. My suspicion is that this article is a satire. It would be a travesty if indeed this article was not written satirically because the author would need to go back to school himself and learn mathematics and logic, for his argument fails completely. :disgust:
 
May 31, 2001
15,326
2
0
Alter the curriculum to cater to the dumbest common denominator, and you drag everyone down. No big surprise.

For those that are looking for an excuse to get their knickers in a knot, I mean any students that are not qualified, regardless of race.
 
Aug 26, 2004
14,685
1
76
Originally posted by: ShotgunSteven
Alter the curriculum to cater to the dumbest common denominator, and you drag everyone down. No big surprise.

For those that are looking for an excuse to get their knickers in a knot, I mean any students that are not qualified, regardless of race.

 

notfred

Lifer
Feb 12, 2001
38,241
4
0
My high school had a similar math program (called IMP - Interactive Math Program). It wasn't "anti-racist", but it was basically an applied math program. The kids in that program spent more time writing essays than doing math problems. Everyone, including the students enrolled in it, knew it was a joke, but it was easier than regular math. If any student needed math in athoer class, say chemistry - and go an easy question wrong, the typical excuse was "Sorry, I'm in "GIMP" math." (yeah, GIMP was a nickname the STUDENTS gave it).

I took traditional math. I passed AP statistics and AP calculus. I don't know any IMP studens who took any AP math classes, or did well at ALL in math in high school.
 

AStar617

Diamond Member
Sep 29, 2002
4,983
0
0
Sh!t like this pisses me off.

To prove a point in my senior year of highschool, I was in AP Calc (one of 3 AP classes I was in), and, disillusioned with all the kids who had nowhere near the courseload I did but unweighted straight A's, began failing it intentionally. Out of character, everyone all stressing, but I was already accepted into my school so I didn't give a fck. They put me in some Applied Math class, and I kid you not, first day's lesson was BASIC interest, not even compounded. All semester the most difficult thing we did was basic probability. Essentially stuff I had been doing since middle school.

In the music industry, there's a saying that if you fck up a recording session, don't worry, it'll get fixed in the mix; if you fck up the mix, dont worry, it'll get fixed in the master; if you fck up the master, well, you're fcked. You know what? When it comes to education, this next generation is fcked, without so much as a kiss. The "pass the buck" attitude is sending our school systems down the toilet. My mother was a student teacher once upon a time in the early 90s, and watched as kids who failed left and right were all given A's by the elementary class teacher who she was shadowing because "they'll figure it out soon enough". The additional failure here is that not only are children ill-prepared, but they are completely sold the lifelong lie that they are overachieving and somehow special thanks to soft grading systems. She now is an adjunct faculty professor of business courses at UMass, and I have seen papers/tests that clearly expose students who can't even form a complete sentence let alone study the goddamn material, yet they come after class asking why they didn't get an A. Don't even get me started on the grade-grubbing subculture that lower forms of schooling have encouraged!! :|

Another one that kills me is the new trend for spelling not to be corrected because it's more important for little Johnny to be allowed to get his thoughts on paper regardless of how crudely it is done. Or better yet, the school that had children reading to DOGS because they responded better in a non-critical/corrective environment! :|

While I agree that school's overriding goal should be the teaching of how to think, none of the above sh!t helps ANYONE, regarless of background, in the real world.

And yes, I am black.
 

Triumph

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
15,031
14
81
Originally posted by: DearQT
Originally posted by: Rhin0
Originally posted by: BannedTroll
wow....just wow:(


Assuming everything said is true, then yeah- big WOW is right. Pretty disgusted with this. Even if it is half true that is pretty bad.

I'd put this right next to "Social Studies" AKA- watered down "feel-good" history

:roll:

I wonder who we should feel sorry for.... An article is published containing ridiculous claims but no data and sources to backup the claims. Repetitive statements and arguments are made, also known as the fallacy of begging the question. My suspicion is that this article is a satire. It would be a travesty if indeed this article was not written satirically because the author would need to go back to school himself and learn mathematics and logic, for his argument fails completely. :disgust:

How about a real response? Which argument fails, and how? Do you agree with lowering standards to meet the lowest common denominator?
 

Slvrtg277

Golden Member
Sep 9, 2004
1,004
0
0
Originally posted by: AStar617
Sh!t like this pisses me off.

To prove a point in my senior year of highschool, I was in AP Calc (one of 3 AP classes I was in), and, disillusioned with all the kids who had nowhere near the courseload I did but unweighted straight A's, began failing it intentionally. Out of character, everyone all stressing, but I was already accepted into my school so I didn't give a fck. They put me in some Applied Math class, and I kid you not, first day's lesson was BASIC interest, not even compounded. All semester the most difficult thing we did was basic probability. Essentially stuff I had been doing since middle school.

In the music industry, there's a saying that if you fck up a recording session, don't worry, it'll get fixed in the mix; if you fck up the mix, dont worry, it'll get fixed in the master; if you fck up the master, well, you're fcked. You know what? When it comes to education, this next generation is fcked, without so much as a kiss. The "pass the buck" attitude is sending our school systems down the toilet. My mother was a student teacher once upon a time in the early 90s, and watched as kids who failed left and right were all given A's by the elementary class teacher who she was shadowing because "they'll figure it out soon enough". The additional failure here is that not only are children ill-prepared, but they are completely sold the lifelong lie that they are overachieving and somehow special thanks to soft grading systems. She now is an adjunct faculty professor of business courses at UMass, and I have seen papers/tests that clearly expose students who can't even form a complete sentence let alone study the goddamn material, yet they come after class asking why they didn't get an A. Don't even get me started on the grade-grubbing subculture that lower forms of schooling have encouraged!! :|

Another one that kills me is the new trend for spelling not to be corrected because it's more important for little Johnny to be allowed to get his thoughts on paper regardless of how crudely it is done. Or better yet, the school that had children reading to DOGS because they responded better in a non-critical/corrective environment! :|

While I agree that school's overriding goal should be the teaching of how to think, none of the above sh!t helps ANYONE, regarless of background, in the real world.

And yes, I am black.


Very well put. Your words pretty match my thoughts exactly.
 
May 31, 2001
15,326
2
0
Originally posted by: AStar617
While I agree that school's overriding goal should be the teaching of how to think, none of the above sh!t helps ANYONE, regarless of background, in the real world.

They don't teach kids how to think in school these days, they're too busy teaching them WHAT to think. There are exceptions, but they are few and far between.
 
May 31, 2001
15,326
2
0
Originally posted by: DearQT
Originally posted by: Rhin0
Originally posted by: BannedTroll
wow....just wow:(


Assuming everything said is true, then yeah- big WOW is right. Pretty disgusted with this. Even if it is half true that is pretty bad.

I'd put this right next to "Social Studies" AKA- watered down "feel-good" history

:roll:

I wonder who we should feel sorry for.... An article is published containing ridiculous claims but no data and sources to backup the claims. Repetitive statements and arguments are made, also known as the fallacy of begging the question. My suspicion is that this article is a satire. It would be a travesty if indeed this article was not written satirically because the author would need to go back to school himself and learn mathematics and logic, for his argument fails completely. :disgust:

Please take your ad hominem attacks elsewhere, luvly. :p;)
 

GasX

Lifer
Feb 8, 2001
29,033
6
81
From the tone of the article I am almost wondering if these are sample questions:

3rd grade math:
Richard has 3 slaves and Thomas has 6 slaves. How many slaves does thomas need to whip to death to have as many as Richard?

5th grade match:
Bubba has lynched 3 black boys and Frank has lynched 5 black boys. How many boys do Bubba and Frank have to lynch to get a total of 10 lynchings?

8th grade match:
A slave ship just started the two month sail to America with 250 slaves. If each slave eats 1 bowl of gruel a day and the ship has enough supplies to make 15251 bowls of gruel, how many bowls of gruel will be left when the ship arrives in Virginia?


Serously, if these are the types of questions being asked, then someone needs to lose their job. However, they are still valid math questions that can be answered with basic math skills, no?
 

blakeatwork

Diamond Member
Jul 18, 2001
4,113
1
81
Originally posted by: AStar617
Sh!t like this pisses me off.

To prove a point in my senior year of highschool, I was in AP Calc (one of 3 AP classes I was in), and, disillusioned with all the kids who had nowhere near the courseload I did but unweighted straight A's, began failing it intentionally. Out of character, everyone all stressing, but I was already accepted into my school so I didn't give a fck. They put me in some Applied Math class, and I kid you not, first day's lesson was BASIC interest, not even compounded. All semester the most difficult thing we did was basic probability. Essentially stuff I had been doing since middle school.

In the music industry, there's a saying that if you fck up a recording session, don't worry, it'll get fixed in the mix; if you fck up the mix, dont worry, it'll get fixed in the master; if you fck up the master, well, you're fcked. You know what? When it comes to education, this next generation is fcked, without so much as a kiss. The "pass the buck" attitude is sending our school systems down the toilet. My mother was a student teacher once upon a time in the early 90s, and watched as kids who failed left and right were all given A's by the elementary class teacher who she was shadowing because "they'll figure it out soon enough". The additional failure here is that not only are children ill-prepared, but they are completely sold the lifelong lie that they are overachieving and somehow special thanks to soft grading systems. She now is an adjunct faculty professor of business courses at UMass, and I have seen papers/tests that clearly expose students who can't even form a complete sentence let alone study the goddamn material, yet they come after class asking why they didn't get an A. Don't even get me started on the grade-grubbing subculture that lower forms of schooling have encouraged!! :|

Another one that kills me is the new trend for spelling not to be corrected because it's more important for little Johnny to be allowed to get his thoughts on paper regardless of how crudely it is done. Or better yet, the school that had children reading to DOGS because they responded better in a non-critical/corrective environment! :|

While I agree that school's overriding goal should be the teaching of how to think, none of the above sh!t helps ANYONE, regarless of background, in the real world.

And yes, I am black.


Quick q: Is AP an Advanced or Enriched type course level (not familiar with US school systems).

I'm surprised there's been such a shift in how schooling is done now, in such a relatively short period of time. I'm only 26, so I was in grade 1 20 years ago, but I cannot honestly recall a "critical environment". Maybe it was my teachers, but for the most part, all of them simply took a bit of extra time to help with students who had a bit of difficulty. I was lucky, in that I found some subjects naturally easy, like math or reading, but i had my difficulties, especially the first time we used > or < signs... :p Fortunately for me, the teacher I had at the time was experienced enough to know how to help me.

Perhaps the Higher-education system is producing teachers who are not really up to the task of teaching at any level? I'm not sure why 25 year-olds are teaching in high School, as they're really not that much older than the student population. Start everyone off in elementary/primary schools, and once they've proven they can teach, move'em up...

Ahh well... hopefully a few smart kids make it through, so that we don't have the kid who did nothing but nurn weed all day running the country... :D
 

oneshot47

Senior member
Aug 6, 2004
435
0
0
So what the hell is the curriculum? (from the first article) What the hell do you teach in a non-math math class? Math is probably one of the last subjects i would have picked to be "racist". Whats next? Drivers ed? "Well, Johnny, you just hit that car, but its ok because you're black and we need a diverse driving population, so you get an A." Some people just need to be hit.
 

Mo0o

Lifer
Jul 31, 2001
24,227
3
76
That's so retarded. Math is just math, just teach the damn subject. I hate it when people fail at something then find a BS excuse like "it's racist" then the school districts have to compensate to seem politically correct