Print

Print


Bush doctrine: no child travels ahead
The good news in 1995 was that American students performed better than
Austrian students in advanced mathematics among students finishing
highschool. The bad news was that Austria as the only one of 16 countries
American students finished ahead of, and in physics they didn't even do
that. They were dead last. A couple of weeks ago Science magazine reported
that the Bush administration wasn't going to let that happen again:
The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), part of the U.S.
Department of Education's Institute of Education Sciences (IES), says it is
bowing out of 2008 TIMSSA, an advanced version of the Trends in
International Mathematics and Science Study given quadrennially to younger
students, because it can't fit the $5 million to $10 million price tag into
its flat budget. Officials also question whether the target cohort-students
finishing secondary school who have taken advanced mathematics and physics
courses-is comparable around the world.
But many leaders in the mathematics community believe that the
Administration opted out because it feared another poor U.S. performance
would reflect badly on its signature education program, the 2002 No Child
Left Behind Act. (Science, Vol. 317. no. 5846, p. 1851; subscription
required)
Mathematics educators, from the American Mathematical Society to the
National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, are pissed. The budgetary
amount is so tiny in the federal budget (amounting to about 30 minutes worth
of the cost of the War in Iraq) that it is a laughable excuse. The real
answer is obvious to everyone. We'll do badly. Again.
You don't make a problem go away by refusing to acknowledge it. And you won't
make the country more able to take its place in the world community of
scientists and engineers by undereducating its students. It's not just the
teaching of evolution in biology classes or pursuing stem cell research or
political interference in climate science. The US is falling farther and
farther behind in the bread and butter educational infrastructure for high
school students: pre-calculus and calculus, modern physics and chemistry,
concepts of biological information, computer science.
Science won't be hurt. Science based in America will.

 (CC) Attribution (by)
URL TRACKBACK : http://www.agoravox.com/tb_receive.php3?id_article=6952
 by Effect Measure
  Wednesday 10 October 2007 Send the story

Rayilyn Brown
Board Member AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson's Foundation
[log in to unmask]

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn