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>TERC considered an experiment by the National Research Council

>We’ve been experimented on. The National Research Council concluded that 13 NSF reform math texts in use “essentially have been experiments” (On Evaluating Curricular Effectiveness: p.188). These NSF texts include EverydayMath and TERC Investigations in Number, Data, & Space. The NRC evaluated a total of nineteen curricula and published a book that can be purchased on Amazon.com: On Evaluating Curricular Effectiveness: Judging Quality Of K-12 Mathematics Evaluations, or read painfully online.

In the book’s conclusion the NRC explains that to first find out if a major investment in an approach is successful and worthwhile is responsible policy. The NRC further notes that the experiment was a success in that it sparked a national debate. Is your child part of this experiment? Do you mind that the measure of success of your little experiment is the sparking of a national debate? What about your kid?

The conclusion states: “These 19 curricular projects essentially have been experiments. We owe them a careful reading on their effectiveness. “Demands for evaluation may be cast as a sign of failure, but we would rather stress that this examination is a sign of the success of these programs to engage a country in a scholarly debate on the question of curricular effectiveness and the essential underlying question, What is most important for our youth to learn in their studies in mathematics? “To summarily blame national decline on a set of curricula whose use has a limited market share lacks credibility. “At the same time, to find out if a major investment in an approach is successful and worthwhile is a prime example of responsible policy.

In experimentation, success and worthiness are two different measures of experimental value. An experiment can fail and yet be worthy. “The experiments that probably should not be run are those in which it is either impossible to determine if the experiment has failed or it is ensured at the start, by design, that the experiment will succeed. The contribution of the committee is intended to help us ascertain these distinctive outcomes.” Do you want your child to be in the experiment? If not, say so. The experiments will continue for as long as parents are willing to put up with it. View the NRC report.
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>Richard Feynman on the textbook review process

>Thursday, August 10, 2006

Richard Feynman on the textbook review process

My wife’s post about how poor public school textbooks are reminded me of Richard Feynman’s account of reviewing textbooks for the State of California.Before reading the account it helps to know who is Richard Feynman. Briefly he was a very accomplished physicist. He is one of the top names in physics. As his section in Wikipedia says Feynman is know for “expanding greatly on the theory of quantum electrodynamics, particle theory, and the physics of the superfluidity of supercooled liquid helium.”And to have the full context for understanding his account of the textbook review process it helps to know that Richard Feynman was also well known for his ability to teach physics. He had that rare gift of being able to understand hard, complex ideas, and then teaching them in such a way that others could comprehend the concepts and principles.In his book “Surely You’re Joking, Mr. Feynman! he wrote a chapter on evaluating school textbooks. His account is well written and it is worth reading the whole chapter.

Here are a few snippets:Richard Feynman wrote about how he would get so angry when reading the books. “The reason was that the books were so lousy. They were false. They were hurried. They would try to be rigorous, but they would use examples (like automobiles in the street for “sets”) which were almost OK, but in which there were always some subtleties.

The definitions weren’t accurate. Everything was a little bit ambiguous — they weren’t smart enough to understand what was meant by “rigor.” They were faking it. They were teaching something they didn’t understand, and which was, in fact, useless, at that time, for the child.”

After Richard Feynman plowed through various books he would go to committee meetings to evaluate and rate the books. Richard found out that sometimes he was the only one who read the books. In fact a blank book had gotten a high rating by a number of committee members.

He recieved a lot of attention from book publishers. They would offer him gifts. For example he said: “Another thing like this happened when one of the publishers sent me a leather briefcase with my name nicely written in gold on it. I gave them the same stuff: ‘I can’t accept it; I’m judging some of the books you’re publishing. I don’t think you understand that!'”I read this account several years ago.

When I went to Google to find it again, I found it on The Textbook League’s web site.

At the end of the chapter the TextbookLeague has a postscript, here is part:”We don’t know of any other case in which state functionaries have given high marks to a book whose pages were blank, but all the other follies and outrages described in Feynman’s narrative are familiar.””During the past ten years we have studied adoptions operated by state agencies in California and elsewhere, and we have seen — again and again — the same practices that Feynman observed in 1964. As a rule, state textbook-adoption proceedings are bureaucratic shams.

As a rule, the evaluation committees assembled by state agencies are manifestly unqualified to appraise textbooks or to render any meaningful advice.”and later the postscript says:”If a state agency really wanted to obtain legitimate evaluations of textbooks, the agency could achieve this by using a process that is very well known: Send each book to a knowledgeable reviewer who will appraise it, who will write a report to set forth and explain his appraisal, and who will sign his name to his report.

This is the process employed by the book-review editors of newspapers, magazines and professional journals throughout the land. It works, and it can be repeated to any desired extent: To obtain several appraisals of a given book, simply send the book to several reviewers.””As a rule, however, state agencies don’t want legitimate evaluations of the textbooks that publishers submit for adoption, because the agencies are allied with the publishers.

“When you hear in the news about again the decline in American public schools, remember at least part of the problem is the process by which the textbooks are selected.

also see https://www.textbookleague.org/103feyn.htm

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>NEWS FLASH From BOE 5/14/2007 Agenda:

>From BOE 5/14/2007 Agenda:
It is recommended that the Board approve Martin G. Brooks, Superintendent of
Schools, effective July 1, 2007, through June 30, 2012 beginning at the rate
of $212,000.

Dr. Brooks’ background is as follows:
� Ed.D. from Teachers College, Columbia University, Department
of Educational Administration
� Ed.M. from Teachers College, Columbia University, Department
of Educational Administration
� Master’s degree from New York University, Department of
Secondary Education
� Bachelor of Arts degree from New York University
� Over twenty-three years experience as an administrator:
o Seven years as Superintendent of Schools, Plainview-Old Bethpage
Central School District, Plainview, New York
o Eight years as Superintendent of Schools, Valley Stream School
District
o Sixteen years with the Shoreham Wading River Central School District
as principal, Assistant Superintendent of Instruction, Deputy
Superintendent, Administrative Assistant to the Superintendent, and Director
of Elementary Education
o Teacher and guidance counselor for the Bronx, New York City Public
Schools

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>Proposed Ordinance – Underage Consumption/Possession of Alcoholic Beverages

>During their Public Meeting on May 9, Village Council members introduced Ordinance 3065 – “Consumption and/or possession of Alcoholic Beverages by Underage Persons”.

The Public Hearing for this ordinance will be at 8:00pm on June 13 in the Sydney V. Stoldt, Jr. Court Room at Village Hall.

Click Here for the ordinance’s full text.

Readers speak out…..

At the “News you can use” meeting last week Shelia claimed that 52 towns in Bergen County have already adopted similar ordinances. They sited and provided the NJ statute allowing municipalities to create local ordinances regarding private property – I have still yet to find the section where it states that underage drinking is probable cause for police to enter private property.

Captain Killion stated that Cops can already enter your property “to check things out” I don’t know you about you but if this has been the case in the past they wouldn’t be able to arrest anybody.

Fairl Lawn was the most recent to pass this ordinance which relatviely mirrors the one proposed by the council. I personally disagree with the ordinance but know it is going to pass. I suggest that the monetary fines be removed and only impose community service sanctions. The suspension of driving priveleges for a non-driving offense is not right in my opinion either.

I agree it is up to the parents. An “arrest” for a village ordinance is simply a summons to court to determine the fine – Has no long term affect on kids “Permenant Record” and this ordinance will do nothing to stop underage drinking.

They claimed there was no way to track the degrees of success by this ordinance. That means they haven’t been writing tickets to the homeowners that are providing the alcohol and the place to drink. They claim that this will magically fix everything.

COME ON!

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>Board Member Hints that Brooks Will Take a Pay cut to Come to Ridgewood

>the fly wounders given the outrage over the leak of his high salary demands, a board member let it be known that Brooks will not get that kind of salary here. Brooks needs a job now and he will undercut his own earning power to get one. He lost out on the job of Superintendent of the Roslyn school district because he wanted $285,000. He went a little lower, but also lost out on the job of Jefferson County Public School Superintendent. Clearly, he had to leave his old neighborhood if he was going to be hired by anyone. So, he takes a pay cut, and adds hours to his commuting time. He’s willing to come to a district where parents have launched a pitched battle against his firebrand extremist math. Why?

So what will Ridgewood pay Martin Brooks? Remember, our District only has 5,640 students. The Philadelphia Inquirer explains how area superintendents are compensated: “In the region, the averages were $155,039 in Pennsylvania and $123,660 in New Jersey, according to data from the states’ Departments of Education. The highest salary in the region was paid to Paul Vallas, departing chief executive officer of Philadelphia’s schools, [which has 184,560 students!]. This year, the job pays $275,000, but he’s collecting $250,000 due to the district’s budget deficit. The highest-paid in South Jersey was Daniel Hicks of Lenape Regional in Burlington County, who received $196,639.” So what will Ridgewood pay Mr. Brooks?

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>Greg May, former candidate for the Board of Education in 2005 Speaks Out

>Having recently read about the latest from the BOE, I for one am just amazed by their actions. First they hire a principal from a school that was placed in a warning status for not passing NCLB two years in a row. Then there was the mishandling of the unsafe bus driver. The coaches that resigned due to administration meddling. The addition of Pseudo-academic programs like TERC and the hiring of a Superintendent that was literally run out of the last district he oversaw. To top it off, the year after year budget increases that increase the maximum amount allowed by law giving us an 80 million dollar budget, all the while telling parents that next year is going to be hard and some services might need to be cut. Of course all of these actions have been and are done under the pretext of “we’re looking out for the children and their best interests.”

To think, some considered me radical for wanting to bring back traditional education and reduce spending two years ago when I ran for the school board. With all this mismanagement of our district, I am almost glad that I didn’t win as I would be embarrassed to be a part of failures such as these.

Greg May, former candidate for the Board of Education in 2005

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>Restore Tradition of Excellence in K-8 Math Education in Ridgewood

>Restore Tradition of Excellence in K-8 Math Education in Ridgewood

To: The Board of Education and Superintendent of the Ridgewood Public School System

For more than a decade, mathematics programs across the country have been under “reform” from within the educational system. These reforms are based upon standards not widely accepted by the very individuals who use, advance, teach, and rely upon mathematics for their careers. Mathematicians, university professors, engineers, and scientists have derided “reform” math programs for abandoning the foundations of mathematics. Investigations in Number, Data, & Space (TERC), Everyday Math, and Connected Math Program 2 are all members of the reform math group. All are in use to varying degrees within our school district, within individual schools, and within individual classrooms.

These programs do not provide …

… for those children who need logical sequencing of topics.

… for those children who are more mathematical than verbal in their development.

… for those children who need to work from the building blocks of a topic before transitioning to the abstract and larger picture.

… for those children who gain confidence from the how in mathematics and are therefore willing to undertake the process of learning the why.

… for those children who can advance on to further mathematical topics at a pace greater than allowed by the group and discovery model.

… for those children who need direct guidance to learn clear & concise standard strategies for problem solving & critical mathematical thinking.

It is time to provide a choice in mathematics education for these children. Only then is our public education system truly for all.

The undersigned …

… support the continued excellence from our dedicated educational staff.

… declare a vote of no confidence in the following reform materials to prepare our children for the 21st century; TERC or Investigations in Number, Data, & Space (1st, 2nd Editions), Everyday Math, Trailblazers, Connected Mathematics Program, Connected Mathematics Program II, and Integrated Math (Core-Plus).

… request the reform math materials not be used as the source for our children’s mathematics education.

… advocate for the benefit of our children to have a district wide curriculum for grades K-8 that is based upon world class guidelines, contains clear, concise, and substantive mathematical content per grade level, and requires consistent usage of textbooks, workbooks, and study plans across all of our schools (e.g, Saxon Math, Houghton Mifflin, Singapore Math … ).

… seek to have a cooperative and open environment, inclusive of parents, restored to our public school system.

… request the Board of Education to intervene on the behalf of parents and taxpayers and return accountability of this adminstration back to the parents and taxpayers.

Math programs do exist that have well designed materials for student and parents, that do utilize the powerful language and vocabulary of mathematics, that require computational fluency and understanding of the underlying mathematical ideas and principles, that recognize these parts are all intertwined in the study of mathematics, and that are not on the bleeding edge of the “math wars” like TERC, Everyday Math, and Connected Math Program 2.

Sincerely,

The Undersigned

https://www.petitiononline.com/Math4VOR/petition.html

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Marty Brooks responds to readers Inquiry

>Dear Ms. Edwards:

Thanks for this note. I’d like to make a few comments about the link you attached. The math wars, like the whole language wars of the past decade, are based on a false dichotomy: traditional education v. progressive education. Good instruction focuses on the needs of the child – every child, one by one – and no one approach meets the needs of all children.

The math issue is interesting in that the battle seems to be pitched around algorithmic fluency v. conceptual understanding. They are not mutually exclusive. Both are essential for mathematical literacy. Students who learn algorithms procedurally without conceptual understanding aren’t truly fluent because although they are able to answer questions correctly on tests (when the questions are posed in the precise format the students are used to seeing), they often have difficulty knowing whether to (and how to) apply that algorithm to new and different situations. Teaching for conceptual understanding helps children develop efficient strategies for computing. Understanding the concept that underlies the algorithm helps students know how and when to apply it, helping them to become more proficient in solving new, differently presented problems and/or more complex problems.

Programs don’t teach children, teachers do. Good teachers vary their instruction – and their materials – based on student response.

Respectfully,

Marty Brooks

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>HOW EXPERTS DUMB DOWN MATH EDUCATION

>Los Angeles Daily News
May 31, 1996
HOW EXPERTS DUMB DOWN MATH EDUCATION

by David Klein and Jerry Rosen

Education experts, university administrators, and professors bear a special responsibility for the problems in our public schools. As math professors at California State University, Northridge, we have been confronted with policies and ideologies which mediocritize K-12 mathematics education.

We have the highest regard for public school math teachers and in no way do we diminish their abilities, dedication, and achievements, under adverse circumstances. But it is difficult to attribute their successes to the kind of undergraduate education they would receive at CSUN.

CSUN has five sets of course sequences leading to a bachelors degree in mathematics. One such sequence is designed for future secondary teachers. It is the weakest of the five. The courses required for the “secondary teaching” B.A. degree in mathematics are watered down versions of the courses for the other non teaching options. The capstone course of undergraduate mathematics, which explains why calculus “works,” is required of all students seeking a Bachelors degree in mathematics, except from those who intend to become secondary school teachers. These future teachers may very well teach calculus in high school, yet they are not required to understand it at the same level as the other math majors. The future teachers we have had in our classes compare favorably with other math majors. It is an insult to the teaching profession to impose these lower standards and one not unique to CSUN.

The 1992 Mathematics Framework for California Public Schools governs, to a considerable extent, the mathematics curriculum in California’s public schools. It is a model of mediocrity. The Framework recommends that calculators be issued to kindergartners and used in all K-12 grades; it strongly discourages placing students by ability or achievement; it advocates that teachers do more “facilitating” and less “teaching;” it discourages testing, and promotes portfolios, “authentic assessment,” and “holistic scoring rubrics;” it de-emphasizes basic skills and promotes “cooperative work” over individual responsibility. In short, it is the bible of “fuzzy math.”

Although university level education experts support it, many courageous high school math teachers denounce the “new new math” or “fuzzy math” of the Framework. During a recent meeting at CSUN with eight high school math teachers, we learned that they re-bind their heavily used traditional math books because they don’t want to use the new texts which incorporate the principles of the Framework. Students at other schools may not be so lucky.

Why is this kind of mediocrity promoted by so many education professors and education experts? We suggest that it is simply good intentions gone awry, resulting in institutionalized “liberal racism.” Liberal education experts fear that minority students can’t learn real math because of “cultural differences.” They recognize that it would be preposterous to lower standards only for those students while maintaining high standards for other groups. Thus, the education experts lower standards for everyone, with “authentic assessment” replacing hard-core, standardized tests, and so-called “higher order thinking” supplanting basic skills.

The clearest refutation of the racism disguised by the Framework comes from the work of Jaime Escalante, the teacher who was immortalized in the movie, “Stand and Deliver.” Mr. Escalante proved beyond any doubt that minority students from poor neighborhoods can do as well in mathematics as any other group. His methods were traditional and “non fuzzy.”

As with “Whole Language Learning,” education professors will indoctrinate pre-service teachers in the “new new math.” As time goes on, it will be harder to undo the damage. A component of this “fuzzy math” approach is to encourage unearned self-esteem and some students, parents, and even teachers may be misled into a false sense of achievement.

More than 2,000 years ago, Ptolemy asked Euclid if geometry could not be mastered by an easier process than by studying the Elements. Euclid gave his oft quoted reply, “There is no royal road to geometry.” Though education experts might wish it otherwise, learning mathematics requires hard work and hard work has no substitute. Teachers and students in other countries understand that time-tested principle better than we do and this bodes ill for our future. For the sake of our children and our society, for the sake of our future, it is time to demand real standards in our schools and universities.

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>Public Hearing – Municipal Budget; Wednesday, May 9 @ 8:00 PM

>A public hearing has been scheduled to solicit comment on the proposed 2007 Municipal Budget and tax resolution. The hearing will be held at Village Hall, in the Sydney V. Stoldt, Jr. Court Room, on Wednesday, May 9 @ 8:00 PM.

https://www.ridgewoodnj.net/pdf/07BN3.pdf

Posted on 32 Comments

>Will BOE appoint new Schools Superintendent on Monday, 5/14?

>The Fly on the wall has just heard that BOE members might appoint Ridgewood’s newest Public Schools Superintendent during their scheduled 5/14/07 Public Meeting.

It is rumored that the proposed appointee will reside on Long Island, NY and commute to Ridgewood in a taxpayer funded automobile, with expenses for fuel and tolls being completely covered by Ridgewood taxpayers as well.

The appointee’s negotiated salary is rumored to be in the $260-270K range, with an agreement that he/she will work from home 1-2 days per week.

Nice work, if you can get it, heh?

Readers comment;

Don’t let the BOE get away with this! The education tax increase is NOT for transporting an official NOT CHOSEN by the community, without public approval, back and forth from his home in Long Island. This is not the Superintendent we need for our district. Please write our BOE officials to protest this.

Correct E-Mail Addresses For Ridgewood BOE Members
Mark Bombace, President – [email protected]
Joseph Vallerini, Vice President – [email protected]
Shelia Brogan – [email protected]
Bob Hutton – [email protected]
Michelle Lenhard – [email protected]

Posted on 4 Comments

>Senator Robert Byrd gave a speech on the Senate floor about the mathematics education ,1997

>A Failure to Produce Better Students
by Senator Robert Byrd

As part of the Congressional debate on education legislation, Senator Robert Byrd gave a speech on the Senate floor about the mathematics education reform movement–what he and others have termed the “new-new math.” Here, from the Congressional Record of June 9, 1997 (Page S5393) are his remarks:

Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, over the past decade, I have been continually puzzled by our Nation’s failure to produce better students despite public concern and despite the billions of Federal dollars which annually are appropriated for various programs intended to aid and improve education. Not long ago, I asked a high ranking administration official during an Appropriations Committee hearing why, in his opinion, we were not doing a better job of educating our Nation’s youth in light of the billions of dollars we have been spending over these past several years. The answer I got was not very illuminating.

Mr. President, our children still rank behind those of many other nations of the world with which we will have to compete for the jobs of the future. Particularly in mathematics, where our kids will have to be especially skilled, the United States ranks 28th in average mathematics performance according to a study of 8th graders published in 1996. Japan ranked third. A closer look at the current approach to mathematics in our schools reveals something called the “new-new math.” Apparently the concept behind this new-new approach to mathematics is to get kids to enjoy mathematics and hope that that “enjoyment” will lead to a better understanding of basic math concepts. Nice thought, but nice thoughts do not always get the job done.

Recently Marianne Jennings, a professor at Arizona State University, found that her teenage daughter could not solve a mathematical equation. This was all the more puzzling because her daughter was getting an A in algebra. Curious about the disparity, Jennings took a look at her daughter’s algebra textbook, euphemistically titled, “Secondary Math: An Integrated Approach: Focus on Algebra.” Here it is-quite a handsome cover on the book. After reviewing it, Jennings dubbed it “Rain Forest Algebra.” I have recently obtained a copy of the same strange textbook–this is it, as I have already indicated–and I have to go a step further and call it whacko algebra.

This textbook, written by a conglomerate of authors, lists 5 so-called “algebra authors,” but it boasts 20 “other series authors” and 4 “multicultural reviewers.” We are talking about algebra now. Why we need multicultural review of an algebra textbook is a question which I would like to hear someone answer, and the fact that there are 4 times as many “other series authors” as “algebra authors” in this book made me suspect that this really was not an algebra textbook at all.

A quick look at the page entitled “Getting Started” with the subheading “What Do You Think?” quickly confirmed my suspicions about the quirky fuzziness of this new-new approach to mathematics. Let me quote from that opening page. In the twenty-first century, computers will do a lot of the work that people used to do. Even in today’s workplace, there is little need for someone to add up daily invoices or compute sales tax. Engineers and scientists already use computer programs to do calculations and solve equations.

What kind of a message is sent by that brilliant opening salvo? It hardly impresses upon the student the importance of mastering the basics of mathematics or encourages them to dig in and prepare for the difficult work it takes to be a first-rate student in math. Rather it seems to say, “Don’t worry about all of this math stuff too much. Computers will do all that work for us in a few years anyway.” Can you imagine such a goofy passage in a Japanese math textbook? I ask what happens if the computer breaks down or if we forget and leave the pocket calculator at home? It appears that we may be on the verge of producing a generation of students who cannot do a simple mathematical equation in their heads, or with a pencil, or even balance a checkbook.

The “Getting Started” portion of the text goes on to extol the virtues of teamwork, to explain how to get to know other students and to ask how teamwork plays a role in conserving natural resources. What, I ask, what in heaven’s name does this have to do with algebra? I took algebra instead of Latin when I was in high school. I never had this razzle-dazzle confusing stuff.

Page 5 of this same wondrous tome begins with a heading written in Spanish, English, and Portuguese, a map of South America and an indication of which language is spoken where. Pythagoras would have been scratching his head by this time and, I confess, so was I.

This odd amalgam of math, geography and language masquerading as an algebra textbook goes on to intersperse each chapter with helpful comments and photos of children named Taktuk, Esteban, and Minh. Although I don’t know what happened to Dick and Jane, I do understand now why there are four multicultural reviewers for this book. However, I still don’t quite grasp the necessity for political correctness in an algebra textbook. Nor do I understand the inclusion of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights in three languages or a section on the language of algebra which defines such mathematically significant phrases as, “the lion’s share,” the “boondocks,” and “not worth his salt.”

By the time we get around to defining an algebraic expression we are on page 107. But it isn’t long before we are off that boring topic to an illuminating testimony by Dave Sanfilippo, a driver with the United Parcel Service. Sanfilippo tells us that he “didn’t do well in high school mathematics …” but that he is doing well at his job now because he enters “… information on a pocket computer …”–hardly inspirational stuff for a kid struggling with algebra.

From there we hurry on to lectures on endangered species, a discussion of air pollution, facts about the Dogon people of West Africa, chili recipes and a discussion of varieties of hot peppers–no wonder our [Senate] pages are having difficulty containing themselves. They are almost in stitches–what role zoos should play in today’s society, and the dubious art of making shape images of animals on a bedroom wall, only reaching a discussion of the Pythagorean Theorem on page 502. By this time I was thoroughly dazed and unsure of whether I was looking at a science book, a language book, a sociology book or a geography book. In fact, of course, that is the crux of the problem. I was looking at all of the above.

This textbook tries to be all things to all students in all subjects and the result is a mush of multiculturalism, environmental and political correctness, and various disjointed discussions on a multitude of topics which certainly is bound to confuse the students trying to learn and the teachers trying to teach from such unfocused nonsense. It is not just nonsense, it is unfocused nonsense, which is even worse.

Mathematics is about rules, memorized procedures and methodical thinking. We do memorize the multiplication tables, don’t we? Else how will one know that nine 8s are 72 and that eight 9s are 72. This new-new mush-mush math will never produce quality engineers or mathematicians who can compete for jobs in the global market place. In Palo Alto, CA, public school math students plummeted from the 86th percentile to the 56th in the first year of new-new math teaching. This awful textbook obviously fails to do in 812 pages what comparable Japanese textbooks do so well in 200. The average standardized math score in Japan is 80. In the United States it is 52.

When my staff contacted Marianne Jennings to obtain a copy of this textbook, I did learn one good thing about it. She told my staff that because of public outcry the public schools in her area have discontinued its use and have gone back to traditional math textbooks. Another useful purpose has been served by my personal perusal of this textbook. I now have a partial answer to my question about why we don’t produce better students despite all the money that Federal taxpayers shell out.

The lesson here is for parents to follow Marianne Jennings’ lead and take a close look at their children’s textbooks to be sure that the new-new math and other similar nonsense has not crept into the local school system. All the Federal dollars we can channel for education cannot counteract the disastrous effect of textbooks like this one. They will produce dumb-dumb students and parents need to get heavily involved to reverse that trend now!

Posted on 5 Comments

>Is a parking garage necessary in Ridgewood? – If so, where?

>Many residents have indicated that a parking garage is not needed in downtown Ridgewood. Improvements to existing surface parking lots would suffice, they say. Others say “yes” to a garage, but “no” to its proposed location on North Walnut Street. What do you think?
Do we really need a 50 foot high parking structure, and is North Walnut Street the right place to build it?