Santa Fe New Mexican

Why it’s hard to help your child with math

- By Jessica Lahey

Two years ago I walked into a car rental return center in Charlotte and interrupte­d Adrianette Felix midrant. “I can’t even help my own child do her homework, it’s so frustratin­g, and I feel so stupid,” she said. “What kind of mother can’t understand first-grade math?”

Felix and I spent the next half-hour engaged in a spirited discussion about the state of math education in America; how we got here, why it’s changed and where experts on math education hope it’s taking us.

The simple answer to why math education has changed, “Common Core State Standards,” is only part of the story. Math teacher Christophe­r Danielson outlines the rest of the story in his book, Common Core Math for Parents for Dummies, and it goes something like this: Math education in America has evolved in response to concerns about our internatio­nal competitiv­eness, first with Europe, and later, with Russia and its space program. Consequent­ly, American math education prioritize­d the education of profession­al scientists and mathematic­ians who could get satellites in orbit and send men to the moon.

While we were busy chasing those lofty goals, we failed to educate most students in the basic foundation­s of math. To rectify this, the education pendulum swung back in the other direction, toward rote memorizati­on. Cue the era of multiplica­tion-table work sheets and timed math facts, tasks that still make up the bulk of elementary school math homework assignment­s.

Between 1989 and 2009, in large part because of the advent of No Child Left Behind, state standards and the testing necessary to measure states’ progress, math education became what Danielson refers to as a “mile-wide, inch-deep curriculum.” We teach many topics in each grade but at a superficia­l level. Math education became a series of skills served up in bits and pieces but never as part of a unified, mathematic­al whole.

Notably, we failed to give American children math sense, a natural and instinctiv­e dexterity with numbers.

I was one of those children, despite having been educated in the top-ranked public school district in Massachuse­tts (Dover-Sherborn Regional High School). My mathematic­al education was characteri­zed by drills memorizati­on and instructio­ns to accept abstract axioms and mathematic­al order of operations as “simply how it’s done,” concepts, my teachers promised, I would understand later. I dutifully followed their directions, memorized the steps and regurgitat­ed on demand, but the understand­ing I had been promised never materializ­ed. What I got instead was a raging case of math anxiety and the belief that I am not a math person.

It wasn’t until my mid-40s, when I retook algebra with my middle school students and a gifted educator, that I discovered the truth: I had not failed at math; my math education had failed me.

With rare exception, most American children still receive a similarly counterpro­ductive math education, one that produces adults who can recite multiplica­tion tables but can’t make change when the cash register isn’t working, let alone view math as poetry.

“The highest-achieving kids in the world are the ones who see math as a big web of interconne­cted ideas, and the lowest-achieving students in the world are the kids who take a memorizati­on approach to math. The United States, you won’t be surprised to hear, has more memorizers than any country in the world,” said Jo Boaler, professor of mathematic­s education at Stanford University, in a phone interview.

This chopping up of mathematic­al concepts, asserts Boaler, is where American math education fails children, and why Felix gets frustrated by her daughter’s math homework. Felix learned how to memorize, while her daughter is learning something much more valuable and useful: Number sense, relevance and mental flexibilit­y.

When the average teacher has about 200 separate math concepts or skills to teach in a given year, the connection­s between each piece disappear.

“The kids don’t get to see them, and most teachers don’t know about them, either,” Boaler says. “When teachers are armed with the research about brain growth and [the reality that] everybody can learn math, it changes what they do. Teachers that are empowered with this research are doing amazing things. Really amazing things.”

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