By Professor Doom
There is another issue to Common Core, possibly
even more dangerous than making addition and subtraction so complicated that
students will learn to become afraid of it long before they learn how to do it.
The language is being changed, with a marked tendency towards lack of clarity
and added complication. A Cheat
Sheet, translating old phrases to new, is provided.
Let’s look at the changes:
“word
problem” is now a “math situation”
I’m serious. First, note how the “old way” is
three syllables, and the new way will use five syllables—high-falutin’ language
is a sign of eduspeak, and this really emphasizes the theme of added
complication for negligible benefits.
The whole point of word problems is establishing
the relationship to the way we usually approach reality (word problem) to
abstract world of mathematics. Calling word problems “math situations” actually
breaks down this bridge, a big step backwards into making math into just
math…with no relationship to the real world.
“Carry the
one” is now “Regroup ten ones as ten”
Again, more words for the same concept. I’ve
already addressed in the previous essay how the new method adds complication as
well as separates the parent from the child. Neither of these are desirable.
“Borrow” is
now “take a ten and regroup it as ten ones”
Again, more words for the same concept.
Incidentally, the correct phrase should be “…break it down to ten ones”, since
you’re breaking the ten apart. More syllables have been added literally for the
sake of adding more syllables here.
“add” is
now “increase”
Again, more syllables for no reason.
“subtract”
is now “decrease”
I guess they couldn’t find a more complicated
word for “subtract.” Perhaps “dis-addify”? I poke fun, and I admit that
“increase” and “decrease” do at least sound more related than “add” and
“subtract”…but I don’t see the net gain for the change in vocabulary.
“More
than/Fewer than” is now “Compare”
It may seem like here we have a simplification,
but the new word rather muddies the issue, and isn’t really a direct
translation. “I have more than you” is meaningful. “I have compare you” doesn’t
work, and even if it did, it doesn’t convey if I have more, or less, than you.
“How do you
know?” is now “Evidence”
Again, this strikes me as a confusing
translation. I just don’t see the point here, although of all the changes, this
one, despite being confusing, is probably the least wasteful.
I can’t emphasize strongly enough how devastating
it will be to separate the children from the parents like this.
“…When literacy was first abandoned
as a primary goal by schools, white people were in a better position than black
people because they inherited a three-hundred-year-old American tradition of
learning to read at home by matching spoken sound with letters, thus home
assistance was able to correct the deficiencies of dumbed-down schools for
whites. But black people had been forbidden to learn to read under slavery, and
as late as 1930 only averaged three to four years of schooling, so they were
helpless when teachers suddenly stopped teaching children to read, since they
had no fall-back position…”
After the psychologists told the officers that the graduates weren’t faking, Defense Department administrators knew that something terrible had happened in grade school reading instruction. And they knew it had started in the thirties. Why they remained silent, no one knows. The switch back to reading instruction that worked for everyone should have been made then…”
Much
like the passage above, there’s considerable evidence of the devastation
possible when children are separated from their families, so that only the
teacher in the public school can “help” the child. This will be the true
disaster of Common Core; already Americans are basically innumerate in many
things, when these new “standards” come up, there will be no fall back for most
families, to teach their children the necessary things (like basic addition)
that will no longer be taught properly in schools.
So far, I’ve identified three ways Common
Core fails: by making the simple into something complicated, by minimal
practice, and by devastating a generation of children by further separating
them from their families. Alas, it fails in yet another way.
Using
a longer words for the same concepts is foolish, and perhaps this will be the
one time in history separating children from parents will be a good idea, but
what about simple practice of skills? In looking over the worksheets, I see
there is minimal rote practice…what little skill building is in Common Core is
minimally reinforced, further dooming the student. Even if he somehow figures
things out, he’ll have no opportunity to truly learn.
It’s
almost as though the people involved with this don’t have human children: a human
child needs to be told most everything many times, and repetition is a key part
of learning. Repetition is not a part of Common Core, as near as I can tell;
that’s a shame, because that means learning will not be a part of Common Core.
But
wait, there’s more.
The last
failure is trying and failing to teaching all this underlying theory to
small children is going to delay things quite a bit. Just as much of higher
education today is simply high
school material repackaged for a higher price (over 90% of community
college courses are identical or weaker than what is taught in high school), so
too will the middle school material of Common Core simply be what used to be
taught in the first few years of school, just delayed. What used to be taught
to 6 year olds will now be delayed until they’re 8 years old, literally
throwing away those critical formative years. I don’t know if throwing away
those formative years will be the biggest crime, but those years will be thrown
away.
I’m not kidding:
Schools are already notorious for teaching very little
considering how much time they imprison hold children. Common Core will subtract
decrease the amount they’ll be teaching by TWO YEARS or more (note how “decrease”
is the more appropriate word here than “subtract”, although Common Core says
the words are the same).
Just as the overly theoretical method for fractions has
created a generation terrified of fractions, delaying their ability to learn
much math until college (if ever), so too will Common Core’s emphasis on theory
first delay our children’s ability to perform basic math until college (if ever).
I realize I should just keep my mouth shut about this, since
the disaster that Common Core will inflict on our children will provide ample
job security for me in the future. But, it’s the right thing to do to try to
prevent this disaster, even if doing so is not to my benefit.
Plenty of other educators are also taking the high road
here…but not enough. What would happen if all the real teachers simply walked
away from Common Core? Unfortunately, I fear it wouldn’t stop it. There are too
many Educationists more than willing to sacrifice children for personal profit,
and many of them are already in the schools.
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