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>End to school math program sought

>By CHERYL K. CHUMLEY
cchumley@manassasjm.com
Thursday, January 24, 2008

Five hundred and seventeen – that’s the number of parents and individuals as of Wednesday morning who have signed a petition to remove a math program that some call “fuzzy” from the Prince William County elementary school curriculum.

“I’m a parent of kindergarten and second-grade girls, so we’re just beginning to feel the pain,” said Alexis Miller, in reference to her eldest’s induction into Math Investigations, a new program that disdains rote memorization in favor of a more holistic, explanatory approach to problem-solving. “I tried at the beginning of the year to teach [the Math Investigations] method … and she doesn’t understand it. She gets so frustrated, she cries.”

For instance, Miller said, an actual homework assignment required her daughter show with drawings “all the different ways you can combine ones and tens to get to the number 47.”

So the finished assignment might include several pictures: One of a grouping of ten boxes as a single set, next to pictures of 37 individual, unattached boxes. Another, of a grouping of two sets of ten boxes, adjacent to pictures of 27 single boxes. And a third, of pictures of three separate sets of ten boxes, with 17 individual cubes drawn nearby – and so on, until all the possible combinations were reached. The lesson learned, according to Miller?

“It’s an exercise in futility,” she said. “I guess the goal is to frustrate. The focus is on regrouping, and I guess the thought is this is going to give some deeper understanding of the numbers.”

Other parents say they experience similarly.

“I have a second-grade daughter in Westridge, so she’s the lead guinea pig” for the program, said James Blanks. “On one homework problem she had recently, she had to determine the number of fingers and toes in her family and how she came up with that number.”

The idea, Blanks guessed, was to teach how to count by five. But the method, as well as the undefined goal of most Investigations problems, he added, leaves his daughter at a learning disadvantage and he would like to see the curriculum “completely dropped” for a more “traditional” approach that includes algorithms.

As such, Blanks has joined a list, posted at a new Web site, pwcteachmathright.com, of unhappy parents and concerned individuals who are petitioning the county’s School Board to remove Investigations from the math curriculum.

“In 2006,” the petition opens, “PWCS mandated countrywide implementation of a controversial ‘reform math’ program known as TERC Investigations in Number, Data and Space … Renowned mathematicians, university professors, engineers, scientists, parents and individuals who use, advance and rely upon mathematics in their careers and daily lives have condemned programs like TERC Investigations, which abandon teaching of proven math fundamentals to elementary school children.”

The petition, said one signer who has a third-grader at Mountain View Elementary School, will be presented to board members at the Feb. 6 meeting.

“I can see using this type of program as a supplement to help kids understand math in a different way,” said Alyson Satterwhite. “But if you don’t do the problem completely the way Math Investigations expects it to be done, you’re wrong.”

And part of the confusion, she explained, is that the system mixes math with language arts by requiring students not only solve the problem, but then explain with words how and why they arrived at that particular solution.

“It’s totally fuzzy,” Satterwhite said. “Investigations gets very wordy, and after my son solves the problem, it wants him to explain, ‘how do you know that’s the answer?’ Well, to my son, he says, ‘I just know.’ We call it touchy-feely math … and I think math needs to stay in the math department and language arts stay in the language arts department. It’s kind of hard for kids to throw adjectives at numbers.”

Satterwhite sees this math curriculum as similar to whole language programs that were popular in reading courses years ago – until it was found this means of replacing the sound-it-out style of phonics with whole-word memorization was a failed system.

From the school’s side, however, comes a long list of reasons to maintain the status quo of the elementary math curriculum.

“This is the program the educators have decided we’re going to use,” said School Board member Don Richardson, Gainesville District, “and I have confidence in that decision … We’re not going to determine our educational program by people making petitions but by the superintendent and the professionals making decisions and following it up with hard data.”

It’s premature at this point, Richardson said, to label Math Investigations a success or failure, because more time is needed for testing. In the meantime, he said, supplementation of the program should not even be considered an option because “it would skew the data to the point where you couldn’t get anything out of it,” where it couldn’t be determined if the test results could be attributed to Investigations or another math curriculum.

Moreover, Richardson said, the parental outcry with the current Investigations taught in the county’s schools stems more from perceived problems with the 2004 version of the curriculum – problems that have since been overcome in the currently used 2008 version.

The two board members with elementary school children learning the Math Investigations approach, as well as Dumfries District’s Betty Covington, were less cut and dry in their assessments of the program, though all nonetheless saw the logic with a wait-and-see attitude.

“I’m certainly very concerned parents are upset about Math Investigations,” said board chairman Milt Johns. “But we made the decision to go with the Investigations material after receiving some very compelling data from staff … and we are going to give them the respect to wait for the data” that conclusively shows whether the program is successful or not.

And Gil Trenum, the newly elected Brentsville representative who began his four-year term of office this month, had this to say: “I understand the approach of the Investigations program. I’m not overly impressed; however, I will reserve making a final decision. I think that’s only fair.”

Math supervisor Carol Knight, meanwhile, said in an e-mail that the level of public outcry for the Investigations program in no way changed her support.

It has, however, strengthened her resolve to “help parents understand the depth of the mathematics that their children will learn in using the multiple strategies that evolve from Investigations.”

One way the school systems fosters this understanding is through targeted instruction and free evening courses to teach parents how to help with Investigations homework. Aimed at promoting the benefits of the curriculum, the classes nonetheless only prove the opposite for some.

“I think if a math curriculum is constructed in such a way that you have to indoctrinate parents to understand it, there is something wrong with that program,” said Satterwhite. “At the elementary level, parents should be able to understand their children’s math homework without taking courses.”

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>Barclays Golf Tournament coming to Ridgewood

>by Brendan Prunty/The Star-Ledger
Saturday January 26, 2008, 2:52 PM
It’s official: The Barclays Golf Tournament is crossing the river to New Jersey a year early.

According to a letter posted on Westchester Country Club’s internal site by the club’s President and obtained by The Star-Ledger, Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus will host the PGA Tour’s first event in the FedEx Cup playoff series in August.

An official announcement from the PGA Tour is expected this afternoon.

Ridgewood club President Alex Khowaylo could not immediately be reached for comment.

The move to Ridgewood ends a 41-year relationship between the PGA Tour and Westchester Country Club. However, as part of the settlement to move the tournament to New Jersey this summer, the Tour has agreed to return to Westchester at least one more time in either 2010, 2011 or 2012.

Prior to discussions of the move to Ridgewood this summer, the Tour had already decided to hold the 2009 Barclays at Liberty National Golf Club in Jersey City.

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>School aide charged with abuse of teen

>From The Record, Saturday, January 26, 2008

BY EVONNE COUTROS

RIDGEWOOD — A 29-year-old female instructional aide at the high school was charged with child abuse after she was found with beer and suspected marijuana while in a parked car with a 16-year-old boy.
A police officer on patrol about 10 p.m. Wednesday saw Lindsay M. Murphy of Mahwah and the boy, a student at the high school, sitting in the car in the eastern section of the duck pond parking lot on East Ridgewood Avenue.
When the officer asked why they were there, Murphy, in the driver’s seat, said the two were talking. Murphy told the officer she was 25, said Detective Capt. Keith Killion.

“The male passenger was asked the same question, to which he replied that he was 17,” Killion said. He is 16, police said.
Murphy told police she was at a basketball game at the high school and that the juvenile in the passenger’s seat had concerns about his midterm exams and wanted to talk.

Murphy, an instructional aide, was asked if she was a teacher and she replied, “Yes,” police said.
Further questioning revealed additional discrepancies in their stories, Killion said. Police found beer in the car and a substance believed to be marijuana.

Murphy was charged with child abuse and neglect because of her instructional-aide status and the teen’s juvenile status, Killion said.

The two were charged with possession of a controlled dangerous substance. Murphy received an additional charge of having an open or unsealed alcoholic beverage in the car.

Murphy was released pending a court appearance, and the juvenile was released to his sister, Killion said.

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>Reginia Speaks at ASCD Conference

>I thought you might be interested in Regina’s whereabouts this coming March 15, 2008 through March 17, 2008.

Reginia Speaks at ASCD Conference …click here

She’ll be speaking at the annual conference of the ASCD with Willa Spicer, New Jersey Department of Education, Trenton

Topic: Using Performance Assessments to Support Learning: State and District Results

OK, sounds pretty harmless…

But take a closer look at the title of the conference:

2008 Annual Conference and Exhibit Show
reinventing schools
( click here to see the ASCD Conference Logo )

… reinventing schools…hmmmmm

Now take a closer look at the sponsoring organization…
The ASCD has evolved into quite the aggressive elitist advocacy group.

Don’t take my word for it, check out their website…

Here are some online professional development courses that they offer:

ASCD: From Success to Significance …click here

Which contains these lessons:

Lesson 1 — Professional Advocacy
• Think about what it means to be an “advocate.”
• Explore how others have become advocates.
• Consider how to advocate for best practices in education.

Lesson 2 — Advocacy and Influence at ASCD …click here

• Consider how ASCD’s Educator Advocates influence policy.
• Learn about the LEAP Institute.
• Explore how to join your voice with ASCD’s.

Lesson 3 — The Whole Child
• Define “whole child.”
• Explore how a school can nurture the whole child.

Lesson 4 — From Successful to Significant
• Explore what “significance” means for ASCD.
• Consider how you can contribute to ASCD’s effort to become significant.

ASCD: Organization, Community, and Commitment …click here

Which contains these lessons:

Lesson 1 — Why ASCD Is Unique
• Explore what makes ASCD different from other education organizations.
• Learn how to describe ASCD to those nonmembers we wish to influence.

Lesson 2 — How ASCD Governs and Adopts Positions …click here
• Examine ASCD’s current governance structure.
• Explore how ASCD positions get adopted.

Lesson 3 — ASCD’s Commitment to Student Health and Civic Engagement
• Consider ways that “success for each learner” (ASCD’s mission statement) refers to more than strictly academic success.
• Identify specific programs that demonstrate ASCD’s commitment to student health and civic engagement.

Lesson 4 — Ensuring a Diverse, Worldwide ASCD Community
• Identify ASCD’s guidelines for its worldwide work.
• Explore how ASCD seeks to create a more diverse and engaged membership.

ASCD: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow …click here

Which contains these lessons:

Lesson 1 — Setting the Context for Leadership
• Explore the early history of ASCD.
• Consider the leadership opportunities within the organization.

Lesson 2 — Enduring Issues …click here
• Identify the enduring issues promoted by ASCD.
• Explore how ASCD addresses these issues today.

Lesson 3 — Our Vision and Beliefs
• Review ASCD’s vision and belief statements.
• Explore actions based on each belief statement.

Lesson 4 — Our Mission and Goals
• Consider how the mission statement reflects the beliefs and goals of the Association.
• Identify the goals of the Association, as articulated in the Strategic Plan.

And let’s not for get the MATH courses that they are offering…

For Example…

Mathematics for Grades 3-5 …click here

Which is full of “non-math”… click through and check it out.

Well kids, it looks like Regina is a bigger crusader than has been revealed thus far… She’s on a jihad to reinvent our schools and has a massive organization behind her for support… She’s a true believer.

Hotwire

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>Gov. Jon Corzine insisted yesterday his office had nothing to do with the arrest of conservative activist Steve Lonegan

>Gov. Jon Corzine insisted yesterday his office had nothing to do with the arrest of conservative activist Steve Lonegan at a town hall meeting in Cape May County, even though the mayor of Middle Township said local police acted at the direction of the governor’s staff. “All I know is they were doing what they were told to do,” Mayor F. Nathan Doughty, a Democrat, said. Asked who had told them what to do, he said, “The governor’s people.” Corzine was adamant in rejecting Doughty’s claim about Saturday’s arrest at Middle Township High School. Lonegan was arrested moments before the start of the town meeting at which the governor was to explain his plan to increase tolls on the state’s major highways. (Howlett and Margolin, Star-Ledger)

Senate Minority Leader Thomas Kean, Jr. wants the state Attorney General to investigate the possible violation of Steve Lonegans first amendment rights. Lonegan, a former Bogota Mayor and possible 2009 candidate for Governor, was arrested on Sunday outside Middle Township High School where Gov. Jon Corzine was holding a town meeting. (Editor, PolitickerNJ.com)

“After a couple days of silence on the subject, Middle Township’s finest released a statement Monday saying Lonegan and a fellow protester were arrested for trespassing because they “attempted to enter the facility carrying signs … in violation of a posted school policy.”

However, video of the incident appears to contradict the police account. It shows a policeman telling Lonegan to remove signs from school grounds entirely. After Lonegan calmly refuses, the police handcuff him and put him in the back of a cruiser.”(The Record of Bergen County)

The “Asset Monetization” Questions the Governor Doesn’t Want To Answer

Question: Will you be borrowing more than $4 billion dollars to cover principle and interest on the $38 billion you want to borrow, until after the 2009 election?

Answer: Governor Corzine wants to bond $38 billion (the largest borrowing scheme by any state) as early as this June. Bond holders will expect interest starting immediately. However, the governor is delaying the toll increases necessary to pay this debt for two years, or until after the election in 2009. To cover this cost, he will borrow approximately $4 billion as part of the $38 billion. Toll payers will pay for this political ploy for seventy five years into the future.

This is called “capitalized interest” and would be acceptable practice if the money was being borrowed to build a needed road that did not exist and tolls would not come until after it was built. Governor Corzine recognizes the political and economic impact and is borrowing this huge sum to delay the increases until after the election.

Question: Will you be using $16 billion of this new debt to reduce the state’s existing debt from $33 billion to $16 billion? Isn’t this borrowing Peter to pay Paul? Will you guarantee taxpayers the current state debt will be cut in half?

Answer: The Governor is not telling the taxpayers that he is poised to bond another $11 billion in state debt over the next year or so!. Section D3 of the State Debt Report illustrates the Governor’s intention to issue this debt that is “Authorized but not yet paid.” The State’s actual debt will jump more than $11 billion while the Governor is bonding his $38 billion in Toll Debt.

Question: How will the state save money by paying down some of its existing debt with new debt?

Answer: We won’t. The Governor will be paying off shorter term, lower interest bonds with longer term (75 year) higher interest bonds. This is equivalent to refinancing your home by replacing a twenty five year mortgage at 4% with a seventy five year mortgage at 7% and just putting your debts off to the next two generations.

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>Public Hearing on Ambulance Billing Ordinance Tonight at Village Hall

>P1010022

The Village Council will hold a Public Hearing on proposed Ordinance #3097, “Emergency Medical Services Third Party Billing Plan,” tonight at 7:30 PM in the Sydney V. Stoldt, Jr. Courtroom at Village Hall.

If this ordinance passes, Ridgewood residents will be subjected to “insurance only billing” for Emergency Medical Service response and transport services. This means that the Village will accept as payment only what is paid by the resident’s health insurance plan or Medicare/Medicaid and will not bill for any deductibles, copays, or other balance due.

However, the third party billing provider will reserve the right to bill non-resident individuals (whether privately or Medicare/Medicaid covered and those uninsured) for whom Emergency Medical services are provided up to the full amount of fees established by ordinance ($550 plus $0.10 per mile for transport services or $125 for response without transport).

The full ordinance can be found here:
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>How Not to Teach Math

>How Not to Teach Math
By Matthew Clavel
7 March 2003

https://www.city-journal.org/html/eon_3_7_03mc.html

It wasn�t working. We�d gone through six straight wrong answers, and now the kids were tired of feeling lost. It was only October, and already my fourth-grade public school class in the South Bronx was demoralized. Day after day of going over strange, seemingly disconnected math lessons had squelched my students� interest in the subject.

Then, quietly, 10-year-old David spoke up. �Mr. Clavel, no one understands this stuff.� He looked up at me with a defeated expression; other children nodded pleadingly. We had clearly reached a crossroads. How would Mr. Clavel, a young teacher, inexperienced but trying hard, react to David�s statement�so obvious to everyone in the class that it didn�t even require seconding?

�Look,� I began, sighing deeply. �Math isn�t half as hard as you all probably think right now.� A few kids seemed relieved�at least I wasn�t just denying their problem. �There are different ways to teach it,� I continued. �I don�t want to do this either . . . so we�re not going to�at least most of the time.� I was thinking out loud now, and many of the children looked startled. What did I mean? We weren�t going to learn math? �We can use these math books when we need them, but I�m going to figure out different ways to teach you the most important things.�

If school officials knew how far my lessons would deviate from the school district-mandated math program in the months ahead, they probably would have fired me on the spot. But boy, did my kids need a fresh approach. Since kindergarten, most of them had been taught math using this same dreadful curriculum, called Everyday Mathematics�a slightly older version of a program that New York City schools chancellor Joel Klein has now unwisely chosen for most of Gotham�s public elementary schools; the district had phased in Everyday Mathematics grade by grade, and it had just reached fourth grade during my first year of teaching.

The curriculum�s failure was undeniable: not one of my students knew his or her times tables, and few had mastered even the most basic operations; knowledge of multiplication and division was abysmal. Perhaps you think I shouldn�t have rejected a course of learning without giving it a full year (my school had only recently hired me as a 23-year-old Teach for America corps member). But what would you do, if you discovered that none of your fourth graders could correctly tell you the answer to four times eight?

The curriculum derives from a pedagogical philosophy that goes by several names��Constructivist Math,� �New-New Math,� and, to its detractors, �Fuzzy Math.� I�ll stick with �Fuzzy Math,� since the critics are right. Nothing about Fuzzy Math makes much sense from a teaching standpoint.

One weakness is its emphasis on �cooperative learning.� Fuzzy Math belongs to a family of recent pedagogical innovations that imagine that kids possess innate wisdom and can teach each other while a self-effacing �facilitator� (the adult formerly known as a teacher) flutters over them. If the architects of Everyday Mathematics had their way, I would have placed my children in various groups, for the most part unsupervised, so that they could work on one elaborate activity after another, learning on their own.

Maybe this approach wouldn�t lead to utter disaster in a wealthy suburban classroom. But I�d derive bitter pleasure in watching a Fuzzy Math �professional-development� expert try using it in an inner-city classroom, filled with kids whose often unstructured home lives make self-restraint a big problem. A guest art teacher, gung-ho about cooperative learning, tried to teach my kids using this method. By the second session, students were getting out of their seats, calling out without raising their hands, yelling to each other, and, in a couple of cases, throwing punches. I avoided this loss of control, because right from the outset, even before I chucked the whole program, I felt that pursing cooperative learning with my students was asking for trouble, and so I mostly didn�t do it. I was going to teach; my students were going to learn.

Everyday Mathematics is bad enough from the standpoint of maintaining a disciplined class. Making it even worse is its Fuzzy Math-inspired emphasis on �critical thinking skills� over old-fashioned drilling and the mastery of facts. What matters is showing that you understand a concept, not whether you can perform a calculation and come up with a right answer.

Defenders of critical thinking say we need to rescue our schools from a repressive �drill-and-kill� pedagogy that makes children automatons, spitting back the facts and rules that teachers have drummed into their heads and never learning to think on their own. The truth, of course, is that no one claims that knowing how to think independently isn�t important. But thinking can�t take flight unless you do know some basic facts�and nowhere is this more the case than in math. If you really want your students to engage in �higher-order thinking� in math, get them to master basic operations like their times tables first. When a middle schooler is learning to factor equations in eighth grade, it�s a crippling waste of mental energy if he needs to figure out how many times four goes into 20. Mastering fundamentals through practice can lift a child�s confidence to do harder work.

Unfortunately, a student in a Fuzzy Math program�including Everyday Mathematics�is unlikely to master much of anything. The hours of logically linked lessons that old-style math classes spent on practicing operations so that they became second nature to students just are not there. As one local paper, complaining about Fuzzy Math, put it, �Rote learning and the memorization of traditional algorithms appear to have been completely thrown out the window.�

Instead of rote learning and memorization, students move haphazardly from one seemingly unconnected topic to another. In Fuzzy Math lingo, it�s called �spiraling.� On this view, teachers shouldn�t use a single method to get addition across to students; they should try lots of approaches�like adding the left-most digits first. That way, the Fuzzy Math approach says, you have a better chance of getting students to understand the concept of addition. In practice, however, trying to teach a host of different methods if students haven�t sufficiently mastered any specific one�as is all but inevitable, since they haven�t spent much time practicing any specific one�can be very confusing.

Equally mystifying, Everyday Mathematics, like Fuzzy Math programs generally, abruptly introduces concepts like basic algebra that students aren�t officially taught until years later. Imagine you�re a fourth grader and see in your workbook, right next to a relatively easy addition word problem, a forbidding algebra exercise you couldn�t begin to answer because . . . well, you haven�t learned algebra yet. Bewilderment is inevitable. Ivette Apollo, the mother of a fourth grader in nearby District 11, also using a Fuzzy Math program, paid for a tutor for her son when the strange, illogical learning sequences began to baffle him. �Frank went from learning some multiplication in third grade right into doing what seems to be algebra and geometry,� she complained. �He doesn�t even know how to do long division, and yet he�s being taught skills that kids should learn in eighth grade. You have to walk before you can run.�

Teachers frustrated by this incoherent approach got little sympathy from school administrators. District officials told us that we should just keep going�even if not a single child in our rooms understood what we were talking about. We were going to spiral back to each topic later in the year, they reassured us. Yet the district officials themselves seemed perplexed by Everyday Mathematics. One assessment, created by the district to judge the progress the fourth graders were making in the program, came with an answer sheet with two incorrect answers. As for students, many just tuned out. The lesson plans jumped around so much that an especially confusing and oddly presented topic was only going to be on the agenda for a few days. Why bother trying to understand it?

The repudiation of skills in Fuzzy Math also encourages a detrimental overreliance on calculators. The use of these gadgets to replace mental computation raises concerns about learning skills for all school children. According to a 2000 Brookings Institute study, fourth graders who used calculators every day were likely to do worse in math than other students. But it�s minority kids like those in my class who are turning to calculators the most. The Brookings study reports that half of all black school children used calculators every day, compared with 27 percent of white school kids.

Then there is the bizarre recommended homework. According to Everyday Mathematics, I should have assigned my students extra-hard material to struggle with at home. Here�s an example from the updated fourth-grade workbook: �Homer�s is selling roller blades at 25 percent off the regular price of $52.00. Martin�s is selling them for one-third off the regular price of $60. Which store is offering the better buy?�

Now put yourself in the place of kid who hasn�t learned how to multiply quickly, who isn�t sure about what a percentage is, and whose knowledge of fractions is meager. The problem will seem forbidding. The homework assignments required way too much reading, too. If you didn�t read well, as was the case with many of my kids, it meant that you were going to run into trouble, even if your natural mathematical abilities were strong. The end result: if no adult is around to walk them through the homework assignment, kids will likely dash off a string of guesses and go watch TV.

But then, the program seeks to involve parents. As the Elementary Mathematics web site points out, �the authors . . . believe it is very important to help parents become actively involved in their child�s mathematical education, and they have worked hard to provide opportunities [i.e. hard problems] for this to happen.� This sounds nice�who doesn�t want to see parents involved with their children�s education? But it obscures some realities of inner-city life. What if the parents (or parent: many of my kids belonged to single-mother households) worked long hours? What if they lacked college educations? Or barely spoke English? Or just weren�t interested? I knew many of my students� parents to whom one or more of these categories applied. For my class, anyway, I came to believe that a good homework assignment should almost never require parental help. Homework should simply build mastery through straightforward practice of what classroom instruction ! has already taught.

There�s mounting evidence that Fuzzy Math doesn�t work. During the 1990s, Fuzzy Math represented the new wave, and President Clinton�s Department of Education was pushing it, so district after district across the country tried it out. But its popularity among educational elites could not hide the dismal test scores.

California, ever on the cutting edge of educational reforms, enthusiastically embraced Fuzzy Math in the early nineties only to watch state math scores plummet. In 1996, California registered one of the worst scores of all 50 states on the National Assessment of Educational Progress. By the end of 1997, the State Board of Education realized its mistake and produced sensible standards that encouraged more traditional math instruction. Other states that experimented with Fuzzy Math have started to see the light as well. �The pendulum is swinging back to the more traditional approach to education,� says one administrator in Massachusetts.

Regrettably, in the heavily bureaucratized public schools, bad results do not necessarily lead to re-evaluation. Fuzzy Math, cooperative learning, and myriad other educational fads are the pet projects of very influential, tenured university �experts,� who fiercely protect their theoretical turf, in teachers colleges and among school administrators. If test scores seem to rise thanks to Fuzzy Math, great: campus enthusiasts will tout the results. If they stagnate or fall, the theoreticians will find ways to poke holes in any critical study that blames the theory.

Back on planet Earth, however, the frustration of parents and community leaders has gathered momentum. �Why do students add with their fingers?� complain many parents, according to the Boston Globe�s Laura Pappano. �Why don�t they know addition facts and times tables cold?� Parents overwhelmingly want to set aside ideological preoccupations in math and get back to fundamentals. A big push is on to allow parents to opt their kids out of Everyday Mathematics and other Fuzzy Math programs. Elizabeth Carson, a mother who has led the fight in New York City to revaluate the public-school math curriculum, perfectly captured the prevailing attitude among many parents in a letter published in the New York Times last summer. �Parents have had enough of trendy, flavor-of-the-month educational reforms, like whole language and Fuzzy Math,� she wrote. �Our children are continually used as guinea pigs for pedagogical fads, promulgated not by experienced classro! om teachers who know better, but by those with vested interests in securing abundant grants and with an eye to the professional glory of being on the cutting edge.�

�Cooperative� learning that leads to classroom chaos, schizoid lessons that fail to impart mastery, ill-conceived and overly difficult homework assignments, lousy results, parental outrage�shouldn�t every teacher have done as I did and thrown Elementary Mathematics into the garbage? I certainly wasn�t alone in hating it. Indeed, I never heard a good word for it from my fellow teachers. At a grade conference one day, one our most respected fourth-grade teachers, a veteran who worked hard and cared deeply about the achievement of her students, summed up the general frustration with the new program: �I can�t teach it.�

But it isn�t easy for teachers to disobey mandated curricula�not if they want to keep their jobs. I abandoned Everyday Mathematics without too much worry because I wasn�t sticking around at my South Bronx school for more than a couple of years and didn�t really care if I turned a few administrative heads. Most teachers are trying to make a career in education, though�so they teach a newly mandated curriculum even if they know it to be absurd. As one of my colleagues told his frustrated class, �I�m sorry, but I�m supposed to keep going.�

Nor will school bureaucrats usually be quick to get rid of a deeply flawed curriculum. After all, if the �experts� say Fuzzy Math is the way to go�and school administrators are loath to challenge the experts�then the problem must be in how teachers are implementing the theory, not in the theory itself.

But even intensive teacher training will not solve the enormous problems of Everyday Mathematics and other Fuzzy Math programs. The professional development workshops on Every Mathematics I attended were basically cheerleading sessions for the curriculum. If you complained, as I did, you might as well have been invisible. A third-grade teacher objected to the intimidating complexity of some of Everyday Mathematics�s word-heavy mandatory activities, mentioning by way of example one of her totally lost students, who could not yet read or write. I had a few students in my class who were in the same boat, so there was nothing unusual about her statement. Yet the district official, smiling, just responded, �I don�t believe you.�

By deciding against local control early on and moving to centralize the school system, Chancellor Klein and Mayor Bloomberg took a tremendous risk. The advantage of charter schools�public schools with a great deal of independence and flexibility�and decentralized public schools is that they have the chance to innovate and distinguish themselves. Any leader of a school system who decides to put blanket �reforms� in place could achieve great success; he also risks unknowingly stamping out improvements made at the local level. Unfortunately, it appears that Klein and Bloomberg, by embracing an all-but universal Fuzzy Math curriculum, are setting themselves up to lose their big gamble.

The inner-city students subjected to this curriculum will be the real losers. What will happen to kids who never adequately learned basic operations like long division�or even their times tables? How will they succeed in the knowledge-based twenty-first century economy? Most of them won�t have parents who can afford math tutors to help them catch up. My guess is that most of these kids will never get the remedial education they need, and that we�ll just brush another catastrophe under the rug.

Matthew Clavel is now writing a book on his teaching experiences and is a student at New York University�s Wagner School of Public Service.

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>Village Council to Debate Renovation of Upper Citizens Park

>Citizens+Park
On Wednesday, January 23, at 7:30 p.m. or immediately thereafter, the Village Council will publicly discuss a project to renovate Upper Citizens Park. This discussion with be held in the Sydney V. Stoldt, Jr. Courtroom at Village Hall, 131 North Maple Avenue.

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>M.L. King ally says U.S. holiday an insult

>DALLAS, Jan. 21 (UPI) — A Dallas minister who marched with civil rights leader the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., said Monday’s birthday observance holiday is an insult to his legacy.

The Rev. Peter Johnson, 62, director of the Texas operations for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, told The Dallas Morning News the holiday should be on April 4, the anniversary of the date King was assassinated.

“We have ignored the essence of his life and the horror of his death,” said Johnson. “We’ve allowed white America to escape the guilt of his assassination and we’ve allowed black America to drift back into a coma.”

Johnson said King is considered a martyr by many but said, if he were alive, he would be considered an agitator by many people, the newspaper said.

“We remember him with parades and galas and banquets, things that are really irrelevant and silly regarding Dr. King’s legacy,” he said. “If we really want to honor Dr. King, we should do something about people who live under bridges. That would be a great tribute.”

Copyright 2008 by United Press International

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>Martin Luther King :The Nobel Peace Prize 1964

>king
Martin Luther King, Jr., (January 15, 1929-April 4, 1968) was born Michael Luther King, Jr., but later had his name changed to Martin. His grandfather began the family’s long tenure as pastors of the Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, serving from 1914 to 1931; his father has served from then until the present, and from 1960 until his death Martin Luther acted as co-pastor. Martin Luther attended segregated public schools in Georgia, graduating from high school at the age of fifteen; he received the B. A. degree in 1948 from Morehouse College, a distinguished Negro institution of Atlanta from which both his father and grandfather had graduated. After three years of theological study at Crozer Theological Seminary in Pennsylvania where he was elected president of a predominantly white senior class, he was awarded the B.D. in 1951. With a fellowship won at Crozer, he enrolled in graduate studies at Boston University, completing his residence for the doctorate in 1953 and receiving the degree in 1955. In Boston he met and married Coretta Scott, a young woman of uncommon intellectual and artistic attainments. Two sons and two daughters were born into the family.

In 1954, Martin Luther King accepted the pastorale of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama. Always a strong worker for civil rights for members of his race, King was, by this time, a member of the executive committee of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the leading organization of its kind in the nation. He was ready, then, early in December, 1955, to accept the leadership of the first great Negro nonviolent demonstration of contemporary times in the United States, the bus boycott described by Gunnar Jahn in his presentation speech in honor of the laureate. The boycott lasted 382 days. On December 21, 1956, after the Supreme Court of the United States had declared unconstitutional the laws requiring segregation on buses, Negroes and whites rode the buses as equals. During these days of boycott, King was arrested, his home was bombed, he was subjected to personal abuse, but at the same time he emerged as a Negro leader of the first rank.

In 1957 he was elected president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, an organization formed to provide new leadership for the now burgeoning civil rights movement. The ideals for this organization he took from Christianity; its operational techniques from Gandhi. In the eleven-year period between 1957 and 1968, King traveled over six million miles and spoke over twenty-five hundred times, appearing wherever there was injustice, protest, and action; and meanwhile he wrote five books as well as numerous articles. In these years, he led a massive protest in Birmingham, Alabama, that caught the attention of the entire world, providing what he called a coalition of conscience. and inspiring his “Letter from a Birmingham Jail”, a manifesto of the Negro revolution; he planned the drives in Alabama for the registration of Negroes as voters; he directed the peaceful march on Washington, D.C., of 250,000 people to whom he delivered his address, “l Have a Dream”, he conferred with President John F. Kennedy and campaigned for President Lyndon B. Johnson; he was arrested upwards of twenty times and assaulted at least four times; he was awarded five honorary degrees; was named Man of the Year by Time magazine in 1963; and became not only the symbolic leader of American blacks but also a world figure.

At the age of thirty-five, Martin Luther King, Jr., was the youngest man to have received the Nobel Peace Prize. When notified of his selection, he announced that he would turn over the prize money of $54,123 to the furtherance of the civil rights movement.

On the evening of April 4, 1968, while standing on the balcony of his motel room in Memphis, Tennessee, where he was to lead a protest march in sympathy with striking garbage workers of that city, he was assassinated.

Selected Bibliography

Adams, Russell, Great Negroes Past and Present, pp. 106-107. Chicago, Afro-Am Publishing Co., 1963.

Bennett, Lerone, Jr., What Manner of Man: A Biography of Martin Luther King, Jr. Chicago, Johnson, 1964.

I Have a Dream: The Story of Martin Luther King in Text and Pictures. New York, Time Life Books, 1968.

King, Martin Luther, Jr., The Measure of a Man. Philadelphia. The Christian Education Press, 1959. Two devotional addresses.

King, Martin Luther, Jr., Strength to Love. New York, Harper & Row, 1963. Sixteen sermons and one essay entitled “Pilgrimage to Nonviolence.”

King, Martin Luther, Jr., Stride toward Freedom: The Montgomery Story. New York, Harper, 1958.

King, Martin Luther, Jr., The Trumpet of Conscience. New York, Harper & Row, 1968.

King, Martin Luther, Jr., Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community? New York, Harper & Row, 1967.

King, Martin Luther, Jr., Why We Can’t Wait. New York, Harper & Row, 1963.

“Man of the Year”, Time, 83 (January 3, 1964) 13-16; 25-27.

“Martin Luther King, Jr.”, in Current Biography Yearbook 1965, ed. by Charles Moritz, pp. 220-223. New York, H.W. Wilson.

Reddick, Lawrence D., Crusader without Violence: A Biography of Martin Luther King, Jr. New York, Harper, 1959.

From Nobel Lectures, Peace 1951-1970, Editor Frederick W. Haberman, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972

This autobiography/biography was first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.

Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1964

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>–"C’mon folks." It’s time to get serious about the size of this problem, and the impact it is having on our district’s reputation

>”Traditional math is notthe only solution. One can argue that the best solution is a blended approach so that we can get the best of both styles of learning. I’ll continue to keep an open mind on this one.”

Modern (read: updated) traditional mathematics curricula have already incorporated those aspects of the reform math programs that have merit. (All of them place such materials and interventionist techniques where they belong–at the outer periphery of the instructional agenda, and nowhere near the heart/center.)

Don’t fall for the catchwords/catchphrases like “balanced approach” or “blended approach” when evaluating a K-8 mathematics programs. Such terms are used only to discourage and tamp down the anger of parents who demand accountability in the process by which the subject of mathematics is conveyed to their children, and utility and parental accessibility in the materials and underlying educational philosophy associated with the prevailing mathematics curriculum.

Programs like TERC/Investigations and Everyday Math are not really mathematics curricula. They are merely tools used by biased administrators (such as Ms. Botsford) to perform school district “makeovers”. The goal is to achieve ideological purity in terms of implementing the constructivist academic philosophy.

A recent advance by Ms. Botsford toward her goal was the introduction of so-called “Authentic Assessment” in the high school. The current push toward constructivism in math instruction has been paired with a similar assault on academic instruction in the hard sciences.

As has been mentioned in this space in the recent past, when a K-12 district’s administrators finally train their sights on mathematics and the hard science disciplines in terms of pushing them off the the constructivist cliff, it is usually a sign that the remainder of the academic disciplines have already suffered a similar fate, or are well on their way to doing so.

If we knuckle under and allow Ms. Botsford to place the math and hard sciences “capstone” on her constructivist edifice in Ridgewood, it could take decades for this district to recover its tradition of academic excellence. As it is, and even if we stop Ms. Botsford dead in her tracks and send her packing before the beginning of the 2008-2009 school year (miracles can happen–just ask the football Giants), we’ve already bought ourselves a good eight to ten-year hangover as we withdraw from the current constructivist ‘binge’.

Our own esteemed Sarah Kate Maskin put it well–“C’mon folks.” It’s time to get serious about the size of this problem, and the impact it is having and will continue to have on our district’s reputation.

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>Proposed Ambulance Billing – NJ State First Aid Council Advisory

>Here are the complete remarks concerning a proposed ordinance to allow billing for Emergency Medical response and transport services made by Ms. Paula Weiler, Northern Area Executive Vice President of the NJ First Aid Council. The remarks were directed to members of the Ridgewood Village Council on Wednesday, January 16.

“Thinking of Changing Your Squad’s Volunteer Status?
THINK AGAIN

New Jersey law defines volunteer and non-volunteer first aid, rescue and ambulance squad as “a first aid, rescue and ambulance squad which provides emergency medical services without receiving payment for those services… Non-volunteer first aid, rescue and ambulance squad” means a first aid, rescue and ambulance squad that provides emergency medical services on a paid basis. The New Jersey Highway Traffic Safety Act of 1987 (“NJHTSA”).

The test for determining whether or not a squad is “volunteer” is applied at the squad level and not the member level. If a squad bills for service it is not a volunteer squad regardless of whether or not its manpower is volunteer.

Once a squad bills for its services, then legally it is considered a non-volunteer squad which automatically loses many benefits given volunteer squads by New Jersey law.

Non-volunteer squads are:

– SUBJECT to NJ Dept. of Health & Senior Services (NJDH&SS) licensure, annual inspection and considerable fees.

– SUBJECT to NJDH&SS unscheduled inspections of ambulances and crews.

– REQUIRED to respond to all calls with two EMTs. Under no circumstances may these squads respond with only 1 EMT and a driver or first responder.

– SUBJECT to federal HIPAA rules and regulations due to the practice of billing.

– SUBJECT to rules and regulations of Medicare and Medicaid billing fraud and abuse. When such fraud is alleged, the billing agent is NOT responsible, but rather a squad officer, or in the case of a municipal squad, the mayor / town administrator is subject to charges and fines. (Reference UMDNJ)

– SUBJECT to Medicare and Medicaid payment practices including holding payments for any reason, sometimes for months (as do insurance companies). Should their claims reviewers find that previous paid claims (up to 3 years prior) were paid in error, they will demand reimbursement be made within 30 days. If it’s not made, the moneys will be withheld from future payments and interest will be charged and added to the amount owed.

– REQUIRED to document additional patient information including Social Security number, diagnosis code and other insurance billing information and keep the information confidential. Squads must also document medical necessity for the use of an ambulance. It is likely that a significant number of calls done by squads will not meet this requirement and will not be eligible for insurance reimbursement.

– LOSE their volunteer LOSAP benefits. The limiting language in this benefit is close to the NJHTSA definitions.

– LOSE all free EMT certification and recertification training provided by the NJ EMT Training Fund Act.

– FORFEIT the use of warning devices, i.e., “blue lights” on their personal vehicles or ask for the right of way in responding to their squad buildings for emergency calls. Non-volunteer squad captains are not entitled to use red light/siren on their personal cars.

– LOSE the benefit of limited immunity from civil lawsuits for actions taken on calls. (“Good Samaritan Act”)

– INCUR increased liability insurance costs, perhaps as much as 2 to 3 times what the squad currently pays.

– LOSE free college education for their child or spouse if killed on duty.

– RISK loss of mutual aid. Non-volunteer squads cannot force other towns to provide mutual aid to their town without a mutual aid contract in place between the towns. Only volunteer squads have the ability to approve or disapprove mutual aid contracts between towns that affect them.

– INELIGIBLE for the special presumption that cardiovascular or cerebrovascular injury or death of their members on a call is the result of the call. Likewise, they do not automatically receive the highest benefit available under the Worker’s Compensation Act.

– EXCLUDED from use of “The Volunteer Emergency Service Organization Loan Fund” by the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs.

– EXCLUDED from NJ State Contract pricing or bidding for goods and services. Non-volunteer squads would no longer be exempt from state licensing of raffles and games of chance. Currently, volunteer squads need only a municipal license.

– LOSE the right to replace supplies from a receiving hospital amounts to increased supply costs for squads.

– RISK a substantial decrease in voluntary contributions made to the squad.

– INCUR increased costs especially if the squad is unable to maintain its volunteer member base. Added costs for paid personnel must then be paid by the town.

– LOST BENEFITS: Non-volunteer squads that are not part of a municipality cannot have the municipality provide insurance coverage for their vehicles, equipment or liability. Non-volunteer squad members are not eligible for municipality provided life insurance; accidental death and dismemberment, hospitalization, medical, surgical, health or accident insurance. They cannot have the municipality provide Workers Compensation.

This represents a listing of what volunteer benefits a squad would lose by being reclassified as non-volunteer. The final decision should be between the squad and the Village Mayor and Council. As I had stated initially, we in the New Jersey First Aid Council would much prefer not to lose our volunteer membership, but the patient’s interest and well-being is of higher concern to us in the NJSFAC. I am merely trying to ensure that all parties are aware of the multiple ramifications of this classification change. I have the feeling that you have not been informed of some of the items I mentioned.”