Author Topic: Uses for Maths  (Read 2227 times)

Offline Biggles

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Uses for Maths
« on: August 13, 2013, 11:56:21 AM »
Here's another classic Dave Barry column.
It's American, so just skip the reference to Dick Cheney.  The rest could be Oz.
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We have come to the time of year when we remove the video-game controls -- by surgery, if necessary -- from the hands of our children, and send them  back to school. And if they complain that school is a boring waste of time, we smack them firmly yet lovingly with a roofing timber and remind them of the  words of our first president, Benjamin Franklin, who said: "There is nothing more valuable in life than an education, except of course money or a nice  car".

Those words are every bit as true today as they were in 1935, when "Porgy and Bess" was first performed. Knowledge is our nation's most precious  resource, after agriculture and Ray Charles. Yet study after study shows that American children are not learning as well as children from foreign countries  such as Sweden and Hawaii. On standardized tests, most American 12th-graders are unable to correctly answer such basic academic questions as:

1. When you wear a baseball-style cap, which part is supposed to go in the front?

2. What is the difference between "hip-hop" and "music"?

3. Who is Dick Cheney?

(ANSWERS: 1. The front part. 2. Plenty. 3. None of your business.)

Why do our children perform so poorly on standardized tests? Does the fault lie with our teachers? With our school administrators? With our political  leaders? Can we, as concerned parents, sue somebody about this and obtain millions of dollars?

Or maybe it's time that we parents stopped "passing the buck" on education. Maybe instead of "pointing the finger" at everybody else, we should take a  hard look at ourselves in the mirror, and place the blame for our children's lousy test scores where it clearly belongs: on our children. They have a terrible  attitude. I have here a letter, which I am not making up,

from a teacher named Robin Walden of Kilgore, Texas, who states:

"I teach math to eighth-grade students. This is an unnecessary task because they are all going to be professional basketball players, professional  NASCAR racecar drivers, professional bass fisher people or marine biologists who will never need to actually use math".

This is a sad commentary on the unrealistic expectations of today's students. Because the harsh statistical truth is that, in any given group of 10 young  people, only a third of them, or 22 percent, will actually succeed as professional bass fishers. The rest will wind up in the "real world", where, like it or not,  they will need a practical knowledge of math.

For example, I recently found myself in a situation at a bank where suddenly, without warning, I had to add up four three-digit numbers by hand.  Fortunately, I went to elementary school in the 1950s, when we were in the Cold War, and American children were forced to learn addition, because the  Russians were making THEIR children learn addition. Thanks to that training, I knew that, to get the correct answer, I had to "carry" some numbers.  Unfortunately, I could not remember how to do this.  For some reason, I COULD remember that "pi" is the ratio of circumference to diameter, but that did not help me in this case. (To be honest, it has never  helped me.) But addition had leaked out of my brain, along with subtraction, multiplication, long division, the "cosine", the Smoot-Hawley Tariff, and most  of the other things I learned in school, although of course my brain has carefully preserved the jingle for Brylcreem hair ointment:

"Brylcreem, a little dab'll do ya/Brylcreem, you'll look so debonair/ But watch out, the gals'll all pursue ya/ They'll love to get their fingers in your hair!"  Which is a total lie: Touching Brylcreemed hair is like sticking your hand into the nostril of a sick pig.

But I digress. My point is that I finally gave up on adding my numbers and asked the bank teller, who added them with a calculator, which uses computer  chips, which were invented during the Cold War, which we won. I'm not saying this was TOTALLY because of my mathematics training; I'm just saying it  was a factor. And that is why we must stress to our children how important education is. We must tell them: Study hard! Learn as much as you can!  Because we, your parents, are getting stupider by the day. We're experiencing massive brain leakage. Soon even the commercial jingles will be gone, and  our heads will actually implode.

Before that happens, we need to get out of the driver's seat, and turn the wheel over to you, the younger generation.

Don't ask us what we did with the car keys.
For the modern man who lives in the city, riding a bike might be one of the only ways to escape the humdrum monotony. To take off and ride. To be both at one with nature and one with the bike. To feel masculine. Adam Piggott

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Offline Neale

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Re: Uses for Maths
« Reply #1 on: August 13, 2013, 01:06:37 PM »
As usual, pure excellence.
Neale

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