Re: But seriously . . .
Exactly. Algebra is a fine discipline, and one I enjoyed -- but the fact is, Cohen is right. Most people can live perfectly happy lives without it. Sure, they won't become engineers or architects, but you know what? They weren't going to do that anyway. In fact, anyone who's mental acumen won't allow them to pass algebra is pretty much destined to either (1) occupy one of life's lower rungs, as Ms. Ocampo probably will, or (2) succeed in an are in which being able to spell "algebra" is enough. Either way, why torture them?
Originally posted by AnnC
Back in the olden days (1970s) when I was in high school, kids could choose either college-prep or vocational track. The vocational-track kids took "business math" and bookkeeping instead of geometry and algebra.
As an engineer, I certainly believe in the benefits of learning algebra. But if a student goes so far as to drop out of high school because she can't wrap her head around the quadratic formula then maybe schools should offer different options for math-impaired kids.
Back in the olden days (1970s) when I was in high school, kids could choose either college-prep or vocational track. The vocational-track kids took "business math" and bookkeeping instead of geometry and algebra.
As an engineer, I certainly believe in the benefits of learning algebra. But if a student goes so far as to drop out of high school because she can't wrap her head around the quadratic formula then maybe schools should offer different options for math-impaired kids.
Comment