essaysbysean.blogspot.com
The other day I was listening to two
schoolteachers on the CBC radio. They were talking about the “new math.” I was
astonished: Are people still talking
about it? The new math, as you may know, was a common topic in magazines and
newspaper columns back around the time of the Vietnam War, back when “people
over thirty” hadn’t learned to question the authorities in our society. But as
for the new math, yes, that we
questioned. Parents were amused and frustrated because they couldn’t understand
it, couldn’t help their children tackle their homework.
As I listened it became clear a
teacher wanted to bring in a new new
math—as some other provinces have done—and it became very clear the young
idealist hadn’t learned from recent history. While the other teacher was opposed,
I listened as an expert young authority enthusiastically explained how the “new
math” would mean the child would try all sorts of problem solving to get the
answer; I heard the same man heap scorn
on the old emphasis on rote learning of basic skills. The new math, he said,
was “progressive” and “creative.”
I had scorn too: for the teacher.
As an historian would say, “If you don’t know where you’ve been, then you don’t
know where are.” Where the teachers “have been,” for as long as I’ve been alive, besides doing new math, is saying judgmental things about my friends from “the wrong side of the tracks.”
They say the children across the tracks cannot do as well in school as rich
kids because their parents don’t role model reading books at home; they say the
parents cannot help their young children
with homework because they work so much or aren’t motivated enough. I’m not
saying I agree; I am saying school teachers agree that socio-economically challenged
families are challenged in doing schoolwork—so why don’t the same teachers,
to be consistent, also agree that the new “new math” would surely result in parents
being further unable to help their children?
And where are we to find the “progressive”
teachers to do this creative math? Perhaps the Vietnam years have made me too
skeptical, but I ask: How many of us during Vietnam could do the progressive new-fangled
“win the hearts and minds” thing? How many State Department teachers in the
Mekong delta, or soldiers or marines, could manage to win the village farmers over
to choosing democracy instead of communism? Not very many, not at all. And so
for this new math, I suspect teachers would merely end up doing it by rote.
Someone else would have to write the curriculum for him or her and plan out his or her “creative,
progressive” lesson plans for him or her.
Too often extreme idealists forget
the rest of us are not as progressive as they are. Even decades after woman's liberation we were still barely ready for the
nice, not-so-Hollywood women of the Dove soap commercials. We regular folk certainly
aren’t ready to creatively teach our kids the newest new math.
I remember when computers were new.
I once walked into the Hudson’s Bay Company the first morning of their new computer cash
registers. The changeover, I was told, had been the previous night. That
morning I heard all their cash registers going “ba-beep, cheep, beep.” It felt
weird. Progressive maybe, but weird. In time we learned to silence them.
Back then we hoped for a new,
improved “paperless office.” Never happened. In my day, computer consultants would come in and
lay down a network and then, overnight, a business would change over to doing
everything (invoices and accounting) by computer. I remember reading in a Calgary newspaper about a
company suing the computer experts: The company was going bankrupt from
automating too fast. I’m sure the company lost their court case because the
common sense practice at the time (At least, I hope it was common) was to run
the new system side by side with the old paper system until you were sure it
worked.
Well then. Can’t this new math be
run for a time side by side with the old? Logically, if having children problem
solving were so ideal, wouldn’t there already
be some creative teachers out there teaching “problem solving” alongside the
regular curriculum? Let them teach their fellow teachers how to do likewise. If
they can.
And, if taught side by side, I ask
sarcastically, wouldn’t problem solving grow to be used more and more, like some sort of evolution-creep (in Nam we had "mission creep") without
needing extra energy or scorn, just as surely as children, to quote Sylvan Learning Academy, will grow to be “hooked on
phonics”? (phonetics)
Now I’m getting angry. You see, there is a fierce expert debate, going back to my grandparents time, on teaching literacy through either “sounding out” (phonics) or else “whole word” (memorizing) But not both. My niece Derrelynne failed to learn to become literate three years in a row until my sister—who role modelled reading at home—took Derrelynne out of the school that clung to the one theory, and put her into a school that used the other. The second time Derrelynne took grade three she “got it” but she was forever a year behind. Why, oh why, aren’t the experts willing to use a mixture of both theories? Have they no "street smarts?"
Now I’m getting angry. You see, there is a fierce expert debate, going back to my grandparents time, on teaching literacy through either “sounding out” (phonics) or else “whole word” (memorizing) But not both. My niece Derrelynne failed to learn to become literate three years in a row until my sister—who role modelled reading at home—took Derrelynne out of the school that clung to the one theory, and put her into a school that used the other. The second time Derrelynne took grade three she “got it” but she was forever a year behind. Why, oh why, aren’t the experts willing to use a mixture of both theories? Have they no "street smarts?"
And as for that young expert’s heavy
scorn over the radio: It might seem charming, maybe, to hear a teenage girl using
scorn to summon up energy to separate from her parents and leave her small town; it is not
charming to hear such scorn in a grown adult—I find it most distasteful… Put it
this way: If I was to hear an idealistic oil executive being as scornful about, say,
global warming, then I would think there must be merit to the global
warming theory. And vice versa if long haired fools were scorning "deniers."
I wish these advocates of the
newest new math would respect recent history; I would ask them to respect regular
folks who never go to university, and then I would request the experts to venture over to meet
with us, here on the wrong side of the tracks. I would say: We are the ones who slogged
through the rice paddies in Vietnam so you could build your ivory towers. We
don’t know fancy theories but we sure know what the ground looks like. Ask us,
work with us. In your ignorant idealism, please don’t ignore us: that's no way to win our hearts and minds.
Sean Crawford
Middle aged,
Watching fashions and fools come
round again
March 2014
Footnote:
~US philosopher George Santayana
said, “Those who can’t remember history are condemned to repeat it.” For a more
sad than comic view of how “US in Vietnam history" is repeating see my essay A Young Girl’s Guide to Wars and Drugs,
archived in March 2013.
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