Originally
posted by
hawkeyee:
In my opinion and from my experience (I'm an elementary school teacher) the only math that should be mandatory at any level should be practical real world math. Working with money. Calculating elapsed time. Estimate volume and surface area etc. Beyond that all we're doing is forcing kids to learn about something that they'll never use when they could be spending that time learning about something that has real value.
You mean like English? Or History? Or Biology? Or Philosophy?
I've never needed to know any of Shakespeare's sonnets for my job.
I've never needed to know the history of Rome or the Incas or Japan for my job.
I've never needed to know how to dissect a frog for my job.
I've never needed to understand Plato or Socrates for my job.
If you want to only learn useful information, why pick on mathematics as the culprit? Mathematics is far more useful than most other subjects in school.
We let people graduate from college with a degree in Art History. What the fluff are they going to do with that? We've got far too many people graduating from college with completely useless degrees. We could use a few people with degrees in these subjects, but we're finding tons of people going to college and choosing to major in these useless subjects because something like Mathematics is too hard for them.
If you get a degree in Mathematics, it shows that you can handle a difficult topic, and that you can work with numbers and use logic. If you have a degree in Art History, it shows that you're an expert at wasting 100 grand, or however much your college education cost. And you have no useful employable skills. But you're great at taking the easy way out.
Academia is a plague. And the plague is the useless crap they teach, of which Mathematics is near the very very bottom of the list in uselessness.