The Hamilton Spectator

Focusing on what matters most in education

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Kids in Ontario ought to get the best possible education in mathematic­s. And that means all kids — including ones who have historical­ly been left behind in this crucial area.

We should hold the government accountabl­e on this, and demand it do everything possible on both counts — designing the best math education, and delivering an approach to teaching that ensures no groups are excluded from success.

What we shouldn’t be doing is getting hung up on rhetoric about “decolonizi­ng” math education and worrying about the “historical roots and social constructi­ons” of mathematic­s.

This is a giant distractio­n from those real issues — the quality of education and making sure the government gives teachers the resources they need to deliver it to all their students.

The issue arises because the Ford government has dropped language about racism and colonialis­m from the preamble to the province’s new math curriculum. The paragraph that’s been edited out said this: “Mathematic­s has been used to normalize racism and marginaliz­ation of non-Eurocentri­c mathematic­al knowledges, and a decolonial, anti-racist approach to mathematic­s education makes visible its historical roots and social constructi­ons.”

How does focusing on language of this sort help any students actually learn math, or help any teachers operate to their best ability in the classroom?

The answer is it doesn’t. All it does is convince most parents — and most teachers, for that matter — that the people in charge of designing curriculum­s are more interested in pushing a political/social agenda than in delivering the best education. It also distracts from the genuine issues buried beneath those layers of jargon. It’s undoubtedl­y true that many students — Black, Indigenous and other racialized students among them — have been disadvanta­ged by the way math and other subjects have been taught.

This is a real, documented problem and it’s in everyone’s interest that it be addressed.

To the government’s credit, it took a big step in that direction vowing to end streaming in Grade 9 — making young teenagers choose between “academic” and “applied” tracks in high school.

So any new curriculum, especially in core subjects like math, should take into account the fact that some groups have been left behind.

And, in fact, while the government chopped some words from the preamble to the new math curriculum, it added this new paragraph: “The curriculum emphasizes the need to eliminate systemic barriers and to serve students belonging to groups that have been historical­ly disadvanta­ged and underserve­d in mathematic­s education.”

That gets to the heart of the matter, but of course, words alone are not enough. The real test will be if the government follows through and makes sure the intent in that paragraph is translated into action and results. We made that point last month when Education Minister Stephen Lecce unveiled Ontario’s new Grade 9 math curriculum.

It’s a single curriculum for all students — no more of that “streaming” — and it looks like a step forward toward making sure they’ll acquire math skills they can use in a wide range of science, technology and trade careers.

The government says it’s committed millions to make sure the new curriculum is properly delivered. But this government has a track record of cheaping out in areas like this, and those who care about math education need to keep up the pressure and make sure that doesn’t happen. In the end, that will count a lot more than all that grad-school rhetoric about “colonialis­m.”

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