cahn: (Default)
[personal profile] cahn
WELP my kids have been in school... three?... weeks and I have a rant!

I happened to ask A. about his math class today because I'd heard from a friend that A. had been placed in math class with her kid and our conversation made me curious about what math they were doing. A. told me that they were doing more complicated multiplication, and he further told me, in his calm but insistent and somewhat annoyed voice (that kid really does have superior emotional regulation) that his teacher had said he'd done a problem wrong and that he'd really done it right.

So I asked him to write it out for me. This is what he wrote:

(99*497) + (1*497) = __ *497 =

He further explained that the right side of the first equality was his explanation of how to do the problem, not what his teacher said. (He knew that in the blank space went 99 + 1 = 100, and then he could do the problem.) He said his teacher said that was wrong because there were parentheses, so he should do the multiplication of 99 and 497 because that was inside the parentheses. ("But it works!" he said about his method.)

(I think maybe she was trying to see whether he could multiply 99 by 497 -- which I don't think he knows how to do -- but then why not just give him that problem?)

Now, my children are famously unreliable narrators in the sense of being very good at leaving out context (this is the same child who said that his teacher takes balls from him, and we later learned that it was a game that his teacher was playing with all the kids during recess that involved them grabbing balls away from each other) so I should keep my mind open that it might be a misinterpretation or that additional context might make it okay. But... I really rather don't think there's additional context here that makes it okay. I mean, I think the additional context is that (I know from school gossip) his math teacher wasn't originally hired as a math teacher and got pulled into the job at the last minute, because you know, staffing.

We of course told him he had done it correctly and cleverly, and I am additionally pretty happy that he understood he had done it right even though the teacher had told him it was wrong. But ARGH. If I didn't have to work full-time right now (I have to work full-time right now) I would SO be spending some time teaching in our school, because they SO need help with lower-grade math. (Upper-grade math at this school has a lovely awesome teacher. Lower-grade math has been foxed by lack of good math staffing for YEARS. Fortunately for E, the lower-grade math problem happened literally the year after she went to upper-grade math.)

Date: 2022-09-20 09:56 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I mean it's a relatively new, more conceptual, Physics AP and I'm pretty sure the College Board's entire plan with it was to market it much more widely so they could make more money. But when we grading it we were very troubled by how almost everyone who took it had no idea what they were doing and failed. They've been running it for almost a decade now but I'm kind of skeptical that anything substantial has changed. Also kind of skeptical about whether colleges actually accept it for credit, so is the only point to give kids a complex??? And make money. And make money.

I have no regrets about leaving the school where I taught AP Physics C, which is, in contrast, a perfectly reasonable class. Especially the part where nobody is trying to get me to spend a week locked in a room in Kansas City grading things.

Date: 2022-09-20 09:59 am (UTC)
crystalpyramid: (Default)
From: [personal profile] crystalpyramid
I suspect that "percent of students taking AP classes" is a statistic that districts like to boast about or get ranked by, and "percent of students scoring a 3 or higher on AP exams" is not used often enough as a sanity check.
Edited Date: 2022-09-20 10:00 am (UTC)

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