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Requiring Algebra II In High School Gains Momentum

ChadHurley writes with this quote from the Washington Post: "Of all of the classes offered in high school, Algebra II is the leading predictor of college and work success, according to research that has launched a growing national movement to require it of graduates. In recent years, 20 states and the District have moved to raise graduation requirements to include Algebra II, and its complexities are being demanded of more and more students. The effort has been led by Achieve, a group organized by governors and business leaders and funded by corporations and their foundations, to improve the skills of the workforce. Although US economic strength has been attributed in part to high levels of education, the workforce is lagging in the percentage of younger workers with college degrees, according to the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development."

490 comments

  1. ok as long we don't have to retake at college by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ok as long we don't have to retake at college at high prices

  2. let them eat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    pi!

    oh wait

    1. Re:let them eat by toastar · · Score: 1

      pi! oh wait

      Is this your first time on the internet in a month?

      We switched to Tau, While not as tasty, It's more likely to get you girls.

    2. Re:let them eat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Women love a man who eats pi.

    3. Re:let them eat by by+(1706743) · · Score: 1

      While a strong believer that pi should be "replaced" by tau or similar, I think tau is a lousy choice as it will just get confused with time constants. Capital Pi is good, although I guess it could get confused with a repeated product. Maybe we could introduce "Ip," in the same way we have Mho.

  3. Require a class on abstract logic! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We need that far more than algebra II, even though we also need required math that goes beyond it (coupled with an education system with the capacity to teach it properly, unlike ours)

    1. Re:Require a class on abstract logic! by khallow · · Score: 3, Informative

      Many schools offer a course on geometry via mathematical proof.That covers a lot of abstract logic theory.

    2. Re:Require a class on abstract logic! by smelch · · Score: 1

      Abstract logic class? Its called Geometry.

      --
      If I can just reach out with my words and touch a butthole, just one, it will all be worth it.
  4. Correlation is not Causation by rolfwind · · Score: 1, Insightful

    And algebra II isn't already required? 0_o

    Perhaps my kids will get a better schooling at Khan Academy afterall.

    1. Re:Correlation is not Causation by ashidosan · · Score: 1

      This ^. My kids already are enjoying Khan Academy.

      Also, it took quite a few seconds before I remembered that Algebra II was optional at my high school (back in '94), though I partook.

    2. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      No kidding. Just because education is a predictor of success does not mean that we should educate our kids. Some kids are guaranteed to succeed without education whatsoever.

    3. Re:Correlation is not causation by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Is this catchphrase a restatement of the "Necessary vs Sufficient" principles? So Algebra might be Necessary (on a percentage scale) but it is not Sufficient. Also the percentage scale means you can succeed without it if a more difficult spread of counterbalancing factors shows up.

      --
      My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
    4. Re:Correlation is not causation by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Come on, people! We should all know this already. Just because "Algebra II" is a predictor of success, doesn't mean that it causes the success. It is much more likely that the smarter students who are (or at least were, before the depression) more likely to succeed are also more likely to take Algebra II. Making everyone take it is going to have about as much success as cargo cults did.

      Require Algebra II - teachers will teach to the exam. Alas, this is what is happening. We don't want you to be able to think for yourself, just memorize a lot of stuff and hope it will get you through. Never mind once you understand concepts of Algebra it's really easy stuff.

      Beware the candidate who says "I'm an Education Candidate, I want to revolutionize educations!" What they really mean is I'm going to pretend and just throw another mandated test at the schools.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    5. Re:Correlation is not causation by JamesP · · Score: 1

      If more people realized that "correlation is not causation" the world would be a much better place, with a lot less BS

      Thanks

      Funny is that according to the Article, Algebra II is really one of (IMHO) useless parts of the curriculum (yes, I had it in High School)

      ended up using some of it in Engineering School after all

      --
      how long until /. fixes commenting on Chrome?
    6. Re:Correlation is not causation by IceNinjaNine · · Score: 1

      Just because "Algebra II" is a predictor of success, doesn't mean that it causes the success

      Exactly. Also, since it will be "required", just how much will they water it down to ensure that the masses are able to make the grade?

    7. Re:Correlation is not causation by Desler · · Score: 1, Insightful

      No, the GP is trying to sound very insightful by repeating the "correlation is not causation" line without even understanding the argument being made. He's trying to karma whore mostly.

    8. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, I was only required to take algebra, not statistics.

    9. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Cylix · · Score: 2

      Algebra, Algebra II, Geometry and Calculus were available at my school.

      I remember not doing so hot in geometry, but the teacher was also evil incarnate.

      --
      "You should always go to other people's funerals; otherwise, they won't come to yours." -- Yogi Berra
    10. Re:Correlation is not causation by xMrFishx · · Score: 1

      Looks like he needs more Algebra II then...

    11. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      George W. Bush, for example.

    12. Re:Correlation is not causation by Geldon · · Score: 1

      In related news, high school GPA has been shown to be a predictor of college success. Therefore, high school students will all be assigned a GPA of 4.0.

      I imagine the success shown by students taking algebra 2 in schools that don't require it is reflected by students taking any elective mathematics courses as part of any curriculum.

    13. Re:Correlation is not causation by Jahava · · Score: 2

      Yay! Another uninsightful "correlation is not causation" post that spews that phrase out when no one in the article or in the research was making the claim they were attempting to debunk.

      From TFA:

      Of all of the classes offered in high school, Algebra II is the leading predictor of college and work success, according to research that has launched a growing national movement to require it of graduates.

      ... and ...

      The study showed that of those who held top-tier jobs, 84 percent had taken Algebra II or a higher class as their last high school math course. Only 50 percent of employees in the bottom tier had taken Algebra II. “Algebra II does increase the likelihood of being employed in a good job,” they reported, although warning that many factors come into play.

      Yes, the article makes exactly the claim the OP says it does, and yes, the OP's point is well-made. It's like saying "most of the world's geniuses could read novels by the age of 4, so parents should focus on teaching their kids to read novels by the age of 4 if they want them to be geniuses." It's an absurdly stupid claim.

      Let me guess... you didn't take Algebra II in high school? :P

      That said, I'm in full support of requiring Algebra II in high school. I think continuously pushing students is a great learning technique, and I also think the world would be a better place if everyone had an understanding of these principles.

    14. Re:Correlation is not causation by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Funny is that according to the Article, Algebra II is really one of (IMHO) useless parts of the curriculum (yes, I had it in High School)

      ended up using some of it in Engineering School after all

      Remind me to stay far, far away from anything you engineer.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    15. Re:Correlation is not Causation by hedwards · · Score: 1

      It depends where you're at. But I was surprised that it wasn't required, IIRC we were required to have Algebra III, but that might be because we were using integrated math which used a spiral approach, meaning that you'd have to have 3 semesters just to see everything that would be in Alegebra I.

    16. Re:Correlation is not Causation by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This was my thought. How was it not already required? I took it in 9th grade along with geometry. 10th was Pre-Calc & Trig. 11th was AP Calculus (one of 2 Juniors in the class) and senior year I drove to a community college for Statistics & Calculus II.

      Although what we REALLY need a class on is "common sense" how to deal with money. Interest, balancing a 'checkbook'/banking account. Hell I'd settle for 'this is how you count back money.'

    17. Re:Correlation is not causation by DivemasterJoe · · Score: 4, Informative

      From TFA:
      Among the skeptics is Carnevale, one of the researchers who reported the link between Algebra II and good jobs. He warns against thinking of Algebra II as a cause of students getting good jobs merely because it is correlated with success. “The causal relationship is very, very weak,” he said. “Most people don’t use Algebra II in college, let alone in real life. The state governments need to be careful with this.”

    18. Re:Correlation is not causation by Chemisor · · Score: 2

      Yeah, Benjamin Franklin, for example.

    19. Re:Correlation is not causation by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      I'm in full support of requiring Algebra II in high school. I think continuously pushing students is a great learning technique, and I also think the world would be a better place if everyone had an understanding of these principles.

      Agreed. I didn't even realize it wasn't required to begin with -- I though Algebra III and/or Pre-Calc were the optional bits.

    20. Re:Correlation is not Causation by cranil · · Score: 0

      Heh... I wish Khan Academy was around when I was in school. maybe I would have learnt biology better. I absolutely hated it. I've decided to watch all the Khan Academy videos on Biology during my term-break :)

    21. Re:Correlation is not causation by YodasEvilTwin · · Score: 0

      Provide a good argument why taking Algebra II suddenly makes you win at life, and I'll listen to you. Otherwise shut up.

    22. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You glossed nicely over this quote from TFA:

      And whether learning Algebra II causes students to fare better in life, or whether it is merely correlated with them doing better — because smart, motivated kids take Algebra II — isn’t clear.

    23. Re:Correlation is not Causation by tangelogee · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Although what we REALLY need a class on is "common sense" how to deal with money. Interest, balancing a 'checkbook'/banking account. Hell I'd settle for 'this is how you count back money.'

      That's what Home Economics used to be...

    24. Re:Correlation is not causation by Sir_Sri · · Score: 2

      True, correlation is not *necessarily* causation. But you cannot show causation without correlation.

      It is equally possible that Algebra II teaches the necessary math tools and problem solving skills to be successful, or that those likely to be successful will take algebra II. Well, actually, I would be inclined to guess the former. I don't know specifically what Algebra II teaches in the US, but in canada to do well at any of the sciences and a large chunk of math/econ knowing how to do algebra makes a huge difference.

      I should probably expand on how Algebra II *could* cause people to be successful. By itself a single course seems unlikely, but there's no harm in throwing out a theory. Again though, I reiterate, having not been through the US system I am not in detail familiar with Algebra I vs II vs anything else taught. Algebra II from what I can understand, in 3 minutes of research (note that searches for 'algebra II' from canada tend to produce canadian oriented results which isn't all that helpful) teaches you how to factor polynomials, deal with complex numbers, and the basics of numerical methods. These topics introduce students to a number of important concepts, first, at least that I can see, is that relationships aren't always linear, and just because they aren't linear doesn't mean they can't be quantified. Secondly it gives tools to examine how non-linear relations can relate to each other (one set of polynomials as an inverse of another set), and lastly an introduction to numerical methods is pretty handy when you deal with anything involving numbers. If Algebra II can be taught in such a way as to impart an understanding of problems that reflects a non trivial analysis, and can teach students some useful math tools it can be a driver of success. And it's of course also possible that Algebra II happens to sit just on a particular cusp of usefulness at this moment in time, and 40 years ago it wouldn't have had the same correlation effect and 40 years from now it won't either. Part of what might make it valuable is the relative number of people who can do it.

    25. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 2

      This ^. My kids already are enjoying Khan Academy.

      Also, it took quite a few seconds before I remembered that Algebra II was optional at my high school (back in '94), though I partook.

      I have to wonder if that's the real predictor: the willingness to take Algebra II, rather than the act of taking it itself. And perhaps the willingness to take it is based at least in part on aptitude in math in particular or academics in general.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    26. Re:Correlation is not causation by ceoyoyo · · Score: 2

      "Making everyone take it is going to have about as much success as cargo cults did."

      Oopsie. You not only assumed a correlation (smarter kids take algebra), you also assumed it was also causation (smart kids taking algebra do better later in college). Yes, you should know better.

      The proper thing to do is an experiment. Make some kids take algebra and see if they do better. Oh, that's what they're trying to do.

    27. Re:Correlation is not causation by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      Especially since in this case there's good reason to think that the folks proposing this have it precisely backwards: Any student who is seen as being college material will be pushed to take Algebra II and do well in it, whereas any student who is seen as being burger-flipper material will be pushed towards more vocational classes. So it's not so much a predictor of future college-level success as it is an indicator of some other predictors being present.

      Most of those other predictors are well-known:
        - educational level of the kid's parents
        - income level of the kid's parents
        - disciplinary issues or lack thereof
        - sports or band participation
        - grades prior to high school (although they aren't as much of a predictor as you might think)
        - after-school activities, clubs, etc.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    28. Re:Correlation is not causation by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      I'm not American - does Algebra II cover Boolean algebra and logic?

    29. Re:Correlation is not causation by PCM2 · · Score: 2

      That said, I'm in full support of requiring Algebra II in high school. I think continuously pushing students is a great learning technique

      I'm not sure I agree. In my experience, the kids who succeed in higher math in high school were the ones who were challenged by earlier classes but rewarded for their successes, which inspired them to keep going on to still more challenging classes. If you go around "pushing" students, pretty soon you'll find you're dragging them instead. Resentment sets in, then defiance, and you've pretty much switched off any part of their brains that enjoyed the process of education.

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    30. Re:Correlation is not causation by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      "That said, I'm in full support of requiring Algebra II in high school. I think continuously pushing students is a great learning technique, and I also think the world would be a better place if everyone had an understanding of these principles."

      Wait, so you DO think that teaching students useful things is correlated with them learning useful things and being successful in life?

    31. Re:Correlation is not causation by necro81 · · Score: 1

      Well, duh! Some of us did not receive Algebra II in high school. Others among us did. I bet most of us didn't take statistics! And I can be pretty sure that no one took a course in the design of experiments.

    32. Re:Correlation is not Causation by i.r.id10t · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I got that, along with "repair" level sewing, some cooking, and baking skills when I took Home Ec.

      Being the only straight male in class with 24 females was just a bonus.

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
    33. Re:Correlation is not causation by PCM2 · · Score: 2

      Agreed. I didn't even realize it wasn't required to begin with -- I though Algebra III and/or Pre-Calc were the optional bits.

      There seems to be some confusion of terms here, as my high school did not have any Algebra III class, and if you took the Algebra II/Trigonometry series, that was "Pre-Calculus"; there was no other required class before you could go directly into Calculus. Even at my local community college, Pre-Calculus is a refresher class for people who don't feel confident enough about the core algebra/trig concepts to move on to Calculus (perhaps because they're adults and it's been a while since they had math in school).

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    34. Re:Correlation is not Causation by smelch · · Score: 1

      I'm beginning to wonder if I was the other junior in your class. This is exactly my experience.

      --
      If I can just reach out with my words and touch a butthole, just one, it will all be worth it.
    35. Re:Correlation is not Causation by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

      But that's for GUUURRLLS. ... Although they don't even take it any more. Leading people I'm in college with not a clue how to cook. I've known people that burned Mac & Cheese because they didn't know you needed water. People that have no clue how to cut, dice or mince.

      Should any of you younger ./ers have any hope of procreating. Learn to cook. It's like edible science.

      I've also saved who knows how much money making my own Halloween/Breakfast club costumes, repairing ripped & torn jeans and fixing random stuff with my sewing machine.

    36. Re:Correlation is not causation by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This is because memorization is a minimum standard. As long as education is geared toward the least-common denominator becoming a jack of all trades, the natural expression will remain 'memorize this and regurgitate it on tests.' It's fun to wax idealistic on applied knowledge, but the fact is that people cannot equally get from knowns to unknowns even after the framework for a given discipline is explained to them. To do that specialization would have to occur much earlier, at a high school or even middle school level.

      And the uncomfortable elephant in the room is what do you do with the ones who can't specialize and can't apply? The ones who can barely pass rote memorization even with lowered standards? Pat them on the back and throw them at the nearest menial labor recruiter?

      One of the central issues is the value of education is it is perceived by society/employers. On the one hand you have the 'push' of parents who all want their special snowflake to be a genius who graduates with a billion A+s and honors. On the other hand you have the 'pull' of employers who need to use education as a (not very accurate) measure of a person's fitness for work. Grade inflation drives down the value of diplomas and degrees, such that most employers see degrees as a minimum standard and diplomas as practically worthless. The simple and inexorable dynamic of the curve dictates that a sizable number of people should not receive diplomas, degrees, etc. But that is in opposition to the social pressure to 'improve graduation rates' etc. no matter the cost.

      It's not a sustainable environment and it will eventually force radical new stratifications of education or social collapse. There are signs of the former, as many industries are now aggrieved with dozens to hundreds of certifications purveyed by as many certifying authorities, though these too are usually accomplished using the same 'teach the test' mentality and don't address the core problem. Some future paradigm will arise from them perhaps, as might be glimpsed in the Cisco certifications' labs that require more demonstrable applied skill than just answering a multiple choice question.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    37. Re:Correlation is not Causation by i.r.id10t · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Every single male should be able to produce 3 kick ass dinners and a great breakfast. Will help said single male to become a not single male.

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
    38. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Algebra, Algebra II, Geometry and Calculus were available at my school.

      I remember not doing so hot in geometry, but the teacher was also evil incarnate.

      You know, the way that Geometry is taught is ridiculous.

      I've been doing a lot of home improvement projects over the year and many of them require geometry - lot's of it. Complementary angles, following techniques (proofs) to get a perfect right angle, etc... all very easy and explained in quite well in books whose audience are people without high school educations. And yet, high school geometry was a living fucking Hell.

      Geometry can be fun and quite useful in everyday life, but Geometry class is drudgery, rote memorization, proofs, and insomnia curing lectures.

      Ya know, I could say the same about every other math topic. Math education just sucks. Period. It CAN be fun. It CAN be interesting. And it CAN apply to everyday life.

      I guess math lesson plans should be written by non-mathematicians.

    39. Re:Correlation is not Causation by vlm · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Although what we REALLY need a class on is "common sense" how to deal with money. Interest, balancing a 'checkbook'/banking account. Hell I'd settle for 'this is how you count back money.'

      We had tracks based on ability, and you're describing the "general math" / "consumer math" track.

      Lots of bitter feeling toward it... Generally speaking, the kids who were not going to make any money got all the education about money, while the kids who were going to make fat stacks of cash were carefully not educated about money but instead educated on stuff far beyond what they'd ever use on the job.

      Set up for failure, by careful design.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    40. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We" all do know this already. The slashdot user base is mostly educated people. But the huge number of parents to which these politicians pander do not know this, and can never be made to know this.

      That is a critical failing of any democratic process. The intelligence of a group decreases as its size increases, and the resultant decisions represent the lowest common denominator of cognitive capacity. What sounds good wins out over what makes sense every time.

    41. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No, the GGP clearly understands the "correlation is not causation" line as well as the argument being made.

      The argument being made has two parts:

      1. Taking Algebra II is a good predictor of later academic success. This is a claim of correlation. I have no reason to doubt the researcher's data collection or analysis, so I'll assume this is true.
      2. A group named Achieve is proposing that we make Algebra II mandatory, as a means of improving later academic success. Reaching this conclusion from #1 implies that Achieve believes taking Algebra II to be causally related to later academic success.

      The GGP is noting that it is not safe to jump from #1 to #2, because the causality required by such a jump is only inferred, and never justified or shown. Further, many others previous in the comments have provided examples of conflating variables (pre-existing academic talent and motivation of students resulting in a selection bias).

      There has been a rash of people lately on /. who complain about other's misuses of "correlation != causation". Those complaining are nearly always wrong. The assumption that correlation and causation are interchangeable is so rampant in modern society that in any given story it is probably that someone has made that error.

    42. Re:Correlation is not causation by tophermeyer · · Score: 2

      Algebra forces you to work with abstract mental representation. Algebra I gets you thinking "if I two X's equal 24, how many will 6 X's get me". Algebra II kicks it up to a whole other level of abstract thinking, like working with multiple variables and modeling mathematical relationships. Never mind the benefits from having access to higher math, this thinking is hugely helpful in cognitive development.

      No single class is going to make you win at life. Algebra definitely gives you some tools that will help.

    43. Re:Correlation is not Causation by ottothecow · · Score: 1
      Can someone clear up what they mean by Algebra II?

      In my school I remember taking basically Math A, Math B, Math C, Pre-Calc, Calculus....it was pretty obvious what part was geometry, but I have no idea what delineates Algebra I vs Algebra II (although IIRC they were all required so unless Algebra II is really pre-calc...my school was already requiring it).

      --
      Bottles.
    44. Re:Correlation is not causation by Synn · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > And the uncomfortable elephant in the room is what do you do with the ones who can't specialize and can't apply? The ones who can barely pass rote memorization even with lowered standards? Pat them on the back and throw them at the nearest menial labor recruiter?

      Auto shop. Electric shop. Plumbing shop.

      And for the record that doesn't mean they won't do well in life. The oil change in my boat was quoted at 80$ an hour and cost me a total of $700, since the mechanic had to move a battery, remove the alternator to get around at things.

    45. Re:Correlation is not Causation by gander666 · · Score: 2

      On the contrary. Highschool level Geometry is important. It is where you are taught to derive proofs based upon postulates and theorems. It is the process that is important, not the results, per se.

      I thought much the same as you while I was taking it, but later on when I took linear algebra, and modern algebra, the lifeline of the teachings from my Highschool geometry course were of incalculable value. Of course, I took it back in 1980, and the times/curricula may (or likely) have changed.

      --
      Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress ... but I repeat myself. - Mark T
    46. Re:Correlation is not Causation by whitehaint · · Score: 1

      Yes it can, but from what I have seen is that it requires a teacher who loves math and has a fairly deep understanding of it (by which I mean when I ask why this equals that, they can show the proof and explain it). I am amazed how so few people who should know, have never heard of a 3-4-5 triangle, one of my best friends actually.

    47. Re:Correlation is not causation by mjwalshe · · Score: 1

      you will end up like the UK where most of the effort goes into getting D students to C - which is the key way schools are ranked. Schools also get round this by running classes in soft GCSE's so as to get a better score in the 5 Good GSCEs http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/educationnews/8374467/School-league-tables-overhauled-in-transparency-drive.html

    48. Re:Correlation is not Causation by tangelogee · · Score: 1

      Exactly. And at least where I went to school, they made you plan out said meals, and budget it.

    49. Re:Correlation is not Causation by corbettw · · Score: 1

      I'd never heard of Khan Academy, so thanks for sharing this. Both of my middle-schoolers are now signed up for it and they'll start lessons tonight.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    50. Re:Correlation is not causation by Princeofcups · · Score: 1

      Come on, people! We should all know this already. Just because "Algebra II" is a predictor of success, doesn't mean that it causes the success. It is much more likely that the smarter students who are (or at least were, before the depression) more likely to succeed are also more likely to take Algebra II. Making everyone take it is going to have about as much success as cargo cults did.

      Actually the most likely outcome will be that Algebra II adopts the existing Algebra studies, and Algebra I gets dumbed down even more.

      --
      The only thing worse than a Democrat is a Republican.
    51. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

      sounds like you had a geometry teacher who actually knew how to teach the subject.

      Mine, along with my algebra teacher actually knew the subject, but they could not actually teach the subject.

      Fortunately my trig, physics, and algebra II teachers actually knew how to teach them.

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    52. Re:Correlation is not causation by englishknnigits · · Score: 1

      You must not be familiar with "study" based "science." Studies have shown that correlation does indeed imply causation.

    53. Re:Correlation is not causation by Gripp · · Score: 1

      math is about maturing the logical process of the brain; something a large number of people in this country could use. i understand what yur saying.. just because people who took algebra 2 did better in life doesn't mean that algebra had anything to do with it.

      but really, this couldn't hurt; only help. so long as it's taught correctly .... and not made to be a simple matter of memorizing lots of random crap instead of understanding.

    54. Re:Correlation is not causation by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      There are two changes that I would truly like to see. The first one being a universal standard of assessment. The educational system is fraught with little fiefdoms each with their own standards and no straight comparisons. A given state for instance can tout their academic success but they can do so in the absence of comparison to everyone else. There are some very substantial differences in the education you will receive depending upon where in the nation obtain it. Further, I am highly suspicious of a US education compared to one in say Japan or South Korea. Right now we simply have to take it on faith that our children receive a competitive education but as time passes there are just too many symptoms that they are not.

      The second one is a fair and accurate credit for the courses taken and the work performed in them. GPA seems all wonderful and good until you realize--which nearly every student does--that an A in home economics is worth the same as an A in political-science or an A in Algebra I is equal to an A in Calculus II. There are absolutely no motivating incentives for pursuing a rigorous and comprehensive education from the perspective of a student. If Joe Slackoff can get a 3.8 GPA by taking slider courses and be looked upon favorably by colleges and perspective employers while Mia Workshard gets a 3.2 GPA taking every advanced course she can get her hands on and is looked down upon for the low GPA what is to encourage poor Mia? GPA should be thrown in the dustbin in favor of a system that highlights the general level of difficulty of the course while at the same time applies the traditional notion of progress within it. For instance, a "C" in Advanced Calculus I would be worth more than an "A" in Algebra II. A "B" in Music Composition II worth more than an "A" in P.E., etc.. The present system is little different than being given a choice between $100K/year to sit on your butt all day watching TV or $20K/year laying bricks.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    55. Re:Correlation is not causation by Dhalka226 · · Score: 1

      My high school was similar.

      Typical-path students (those who didn't need a remedial math course, basically) would start in Algebra 1 and then move to Geometry their second year. Most would probably stop there, since only two years of math were required. But for those who didn't, they moved to Algebra 2 their junior year and Trig/Pre-Calc their senior year.

      There was also an accelerated path for those identified back in grade school to be faster students which would have seen them take Algebra 1 in 8th grade, then Geometry, Algebra II, Trig/Pre-Calc and Calculus AP in high school.

      I was on the typical path (not to sound arrogant but I should have been on the accelerated path except I moved into the district late in 4th grade and they never bounced me up), but I did do four years of math. Algebra was always my favorite. Geometry I did mediocre at. Algebra 2 is where everything started clicking really strongly, probably because I had my best and favorite math teacher of all my schooling. After that I had a lot of trouble figuring out why I should care and lost interest. I did alright in the classes, but I certainly didn't apply myself and I don't remember most of it anymore. The death-knell for me with math was in a calculus class in university, when a student asked the teacher what we might need this for and her response was, "well, what if you had an irregularly shaped garden and needed to know how much dirt to buy?" I'm pretty sure my eyes rolled so far back into my head that they never looked at the whiteboard again.

      It's something I'm starting to regret, which actually brings me to a question: Does anybody know one of those free online class sites with a decent set of math classes, preferably geared more toward programmers? I'm a web developer primarily so I don't use it a ton, but I'd like to get more under my belt and I think some more easy-to-see applications for the things they're teaching would help me maintain interest. I'd probably need to start back at the Trig stage since it has been so long.

    56. Re:Correlation is not causation by NEDHead · · Score: 1

      Re this subject, a recent article I read (Scientific American or MIT Tech Review?) described the algebra 2/success correlation that was found in a school district, and further data mining (the main topic of the article) found the correlation of 8th grade creative writing success with later algebra 2 success. More effort was put into the early writing, and results ensued.

    57. Re:Correlation is not causation by coaxial · · Score: 1

      True. but higher education attainment does predict success, again and again.

      Making everyone take it is going to have about as much success as cargo cults did.

      I believe this same statement has been given every time educational standards have increased, and yet economic history tells a completely different story.

    58. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Peter+Mork · · Score: 1

      I think Math C was probably Algebra II. I'd guess Math A = Algebra, Math B = Geometry, Math C = Algebra II.

    59. Re:Correlation is not Causation by jbengt · · Score: 1

      OK, are we talking semesters I, II, & III or years I, II, & III?

    60. Re:Correlation is not causation by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      If your communication skills even remotely reflect the rest of your education I believe there are a number of people that should be deeply afraid of the products of your engineering skills.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    61. Re:Correlation is not causation by MagikSlinger · · Score: 2

      One of the study's authors actually says that:

      Among the skeptics is Carnevale, one of the researchers who reported the link between Algebra II and good jobs. He warns against thinking of Algebra II as a cause of students getting good jobs merely because it is correlated with success.

      It's a mindless "We gotta do something!" attitude. From what I've read over the years, your early childhood environment (nutrition + parenting + stimulation) plus your parents (educated parents => educated kids, successful parents => successful kids) are the strongest factors for a child doing well in school and life.

      For America's school children, the first problem is that a surprising amount of American parents seems almost anti-education, anti-intellectual. The second problem is that a child's neighbourhood and the other kids attending the school also have an effect (which lead to the infamous "busing" experiments of the 1970s).

      But I don't know if there are effective methods to transform a neighbourhood and an entire school population into high performers, so I don't know if there is anything any single government or organization can do. I don't know what can be done to change America's parents. This problem, IMHO, has always plagued America, but generous immigration laws and the freedom to rise always compensated for it: America attracted the best & brightest with the opportunity to become rich thus saving the rest of America from itself.

      --
      The bitter lessons of a veteran coder: http://bitterprogrammer.blogspot.com
    62. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Come on, people! We should all know this already. Just because "Algebra II" is a predictor of success, doesn't mean that it causes the success. It is much more likely that the smarter students who are (or at least were, before the depression) more likely to succeed are also more likely to take Algebra II. Making everyone take it is going to have about as much success as cargo cults did.

      Plus, the only reason "hard" classes were interesting in high school is because they were filled with people who actually wanted to be taking them. If everyone has to take it, not only do you get a class filled people who don't want to be there, but it also has to be dumbed down so that everyone can pass. Forcing everyone to take hard classes == Forcing schools to make hard classes easy == Getting rid of hard classes.

    63. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, correlation is not *necessarily* causation. But you cannot show causation without correlation.

      Actually, you can. Correlation measures the degree of linear relationship. Non-linear relationships can have zero correlation and still be causal. For example, if X is distributed symmetrically around zero and Y = X^2, X has a causal relationship with Y (but not vice-versa) but the correlation between X and Y is zero.

    64. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Bengie · · Score: 1

      In my state, you need "algebra, geometry, and statistics" to graduate. Two credits of math total, which is 0.5 credits per semester or four high school level math classes.

      I'm amazed I even enjoyed math. From elem to middle school, I was a D student in math. I cannot do math in my head, but the logic of math is simple. So all my early math classes I did horrible in. Finally pre-algebra came along and I could use a calculator instead of doing math in my head. I went from D to an A. All the way through high school, I got As in math, but prior to high school, I got Ds.

      Still, to this day, I mess up math in my head or even on paper a lot, but give me a calculator and an equation and I'll break it down via logic.

      How I hated Middle/High school. 8 hours per day, tons of homework and I got horrible grades. I was afraid of college because of how poorly I did in regular school. I finally went to college and it was a breeze. Seems I accel at application of knowledge and general problem solving, but I am very bad at memorization and regurgitating random facts.

    65. Re:Correlation is not causation by jpmorgan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I hear the complaint "teachers will teach to the exam" all the time as an argument against standardized testing. Damn right they will. If this results in a poor education, it means they weren't good exams (e.g., the SAT). I had standardized exams at the end of my secondary education and we had to know the material damn well to do well on them.

      "Teaching to the test" is a talking point, not a valid criticism. It presupposes the system will be implemented badly. Anything and everything will fail when the execution is poor.

    66. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Probably required for college track, but not required for everyone.

      Also, what "Algebra II" means is not so clear. I didn't think this was a standard term. We had Algebra I then Geometry then Algebra II then Pre-Calculus.

      (And no calculus because it was a small school; from experience I learned that those who had calculus in high school and then tested out of first semester calculus in university struggled much harder, so I don't think I missed out)

    67. Re:Correlation is not causation by Antisyzygy · · Score: 1

      I still think kids should be forced to learn Algebra II and Trig unless they can show they have a mental disability that makes it impossible. There's no excuse to not know such easy math. Everyone has a brain for it, its just that some kids don't like math so they convince themselves they are bad at it. If you had any idea how much harder and more abstract mathematical topics exist in the world you would probably advocate them learning at least calculus in high school. I just about have an MS in Math and I haven't even scratched the surface of the knowledge that currently exists. Even PhDs in math don't know everything about math, they have to specialize in specific topics and wouldn't know much about topics two steps removed from their specialty (such as Numerical PDE's and Topology).

      --
      That brings me to an interesting point, / . is just "the ramblings of socially-inept, technology-literate news-mongers".
    68. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      PFFFF, you fancy college kids... I was lucky to make it through General Math with a "D" and somehow I managed to make in life! They tell me I can be manager of this diner if'n I keep up working as hard as I do!

    69. Re:Correlation is not causation by kyle5t · · Score: 1

      I was a math major. As a kid, math was what inspired me. But other kids are inspired by different subjects, less "valuable" subjects, and we have to see this as a benefit rather than a detriment.

      "Our only hope for the future is to adopt a new conception of human ecology, one in which we start to reconstitute our conception of the richness of human capacity. Our education system has mined our minds in the way that we strip mine the earth for a particular commodity. And for the future it won't service. We have to rethink the fundamental principles on which we're educating our children... our task is to educate their whole being."
      Ken Robinson, from this truly amazing TED talk:
      http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/ken_robinson_says_schools_kill_creativity.html

    70. Re:Correlation is not causation by jbengt · · Score: 1
      From the OP:

      Come on, people! We should all know this already. Just because "Algebra II" is a predictor of success, doesn't mean that it causes the success.

      From the parent comment:

      Yes, the article makes exactly the claim the OP says it does, and yes, the OP's point is well-made.

      You may have passed Algebra II, but you fail reading.

      From TFA:

      And whether learning Algebra II causes students to fare better in life, or whether it is merely correlated with them doing better — because smart, motivated kids take Algebra II — isn’t clear

    71. Re:Correlation is not causation by mr1911 · · Score: 1

      Your logic and reason have no business in public policy.

      You have just been placed on a special agitator's list. Enjoy your next flight - there will be a special encounter with the TSA waiting for you.

      --
      This post comes with a double-your-money-back guarantee!
      Any offense taken to this post is at your sole discretion.
    72. Re:Correlation is not causation by bkaul01 · · Score: 2

      It's a common talking point to complain about "teaching to the exam" but if the exam is compiled appropriately to test the students' knowledge of the material, how exactly is that a bad thing, especially in STEM classes, where the knowledge being gained is objective? If the student can pass a reasonable exam over the material covered, that's evidence that the student has learned that material. That's the whole point of an examination!

    73. Re:Correlation is not causation by characterZer0 · · Score: 1

      I do not want the ones who cannot specialize and cannot apply working on my car brakes or my home electricity and plumbing. Send them somewhere they cannot do any damage (e.g. ditch digging, burger flipping) or somewhere that damage is acceptable and perhaps preferable (e.g. demolition, military, Congress).

      --
      Go green: turn off your refrigerator.
    74. Re:Correlation is not Causation by ottothecow · · Score: 1
      Nah, it was an integrated curriculum so A, B, and C were a contiguous sequence. You might do some algebra, then some basic geometry, then some further algebra, and then move into trig...

      Seemed funny that they keep pushing the integrated stuff (lots of word problems and applications) as far back as middle school...but when it is time to move toward calculus, it jumps right back to straight textbooks.

      --
      Bottles.
    75. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am not sure what you mean by "memorization is a minimum standard". Some people are good at memorizing things (to some extent, I'm one of them), but some people aren't. Whenever i was given a list of equations to memorize for a science/math exam, I would figure out how to derive all of them and promptly ignore the list because understanding them made them easier to use than memorizing them.

      I find it very hard to believe that there is any significant portion of children who are completely incapable of growing up to be productive members of society. The sibling post suggests trades like plumbing or car mechanic as jobs that do not require doing well in school. I also suspect there are serious issues with teaching methods, both that different teaching methods work for different students and also that students don't care if they are not properly motivated (students aren't stupid: they know if the teacher is just "teaching to the test" and not actually teaching anything useful).

    76. Re:Correlation is not causation by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Or the fact that many universities require "Algebra II" as a prerequisite, or at least require you to do remedial mathematics your first semester. Many high schools to require algebra II if you're going to go to college. So the predictor is really "those on college prep track are more likely to succeed than those who are not planning on going to college".

    77. Re:Correlation is not causation by AnyoneEB · · Score: 1

      My high school gave an unweighted GPA as you describe but also a QPA ("Quality Point Average") score that was weighted by the level of course. Other people I have talked to have mentioned weighted GPA systems that offer a similar correction. Of course, the best way to maximize QPA/weighted GPA may still not have been to get As in the most challenging courses, but such a system at least makes an attempt in that direction.

      --
      Centralization breaks the internet.
    78. Re:Correlation is not causation by russotto · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Is this catchphrase a restatement of the "Necessary vs Sufficient" principles? So Algebra might be Necessary (on a percentage scale) but it is not Sufficient.

      Algebra II could be neither necessary nor sufficient, but still correlated with success. For instance, it could be that kids who are able and/or motivated to take Algebra II are likely to be successful.

    79. Re:Correlation is not causation by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      A universal standard has problems. Most everyone plays a lot of catch up in college anyway. I see people getting As in high school struggling in college and those with a C average succeeding. High school is a bad predictor of success anyway, and that should not be what high school is about. Students are still growing up, being flooded with hormones, and being thoroughly distracted by a wide world that is still relatively new to them. You can't expect high school students to be fully 100% mature adults, or to have temporary setbacks be an indicator of future prospects. So if there were a universal standard it would have to be set pretty low, since high schools are intent on teaching all students not just the best students. They want to get the students to a base level, loaded and on the launching pad. (and in the US at least we're not too keen on the idea of tiered secondary education, with some schools only for those who tested well at age 12 and other schools for those who tested poorly)

      For instance, why should we compare a student who's already got a post-grad program picked out to a student who's planning on helping out in the parent's shop after graduation?

    80. Re:Correlation is not causation by maxume · · Score: 1

      So are increasing educational standards a reason for improvements in the economy, or is spending more resources on education a result of the improved economy?

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    81. Re:Correlation is not causation by mspohr · · Score: 1

      I had a boat with similar problems. I finally found an "Archimedes screw" device to put down the oil dipstick tube which removed the old oil. This was a spiral wire inside a plastic tube turned by an electric drill. This worked well.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    82. Re:Correlation is not causation by drsquare · · Score: 1

      This is true as long as by 'learning' you mean 'memorisation'. In some cases, knowing the subject may actually mean performing worse in the test.

      The main thing testing culture teaches kids is that nothing's worth learning unless you can get a grade for it. Never mind learning extra material to expand your mind, you're better off studying the same shit over and over again so you're sure you can regurgitate it onto the exam paper and get the grades.

    83. Re:Correlation is not Causation by hedwards · · Score: 1

      Around here it's been semesters for some time, and getting even that is tough. The article doesn't really say what they're talking about. Around here most schools are on the semester or trimester system and so one of those terms would be used for Algerbra I, andother for Algebra II and so forth.

    84. Re:Correlation is not causation by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      I think it goes both ways though. Many students will just do what is required of them to get their highschool diploma. If you don't require that they take certain classes, they never will. I live in Canada, so my experiences are a bit different, but I always found it odd that they made you take 5 english courses, but only 2 math courses. Same goes for science and many other subjects. While I wouldn't say English is not important, I would have to say that understanding the scientific method, or understanding the logic and deductive reasoning for math is at least as important, if not more important that understanding how to analyse the symbolism and archetypes of some 400 year old text. While English is also about being able to read and comprehend text, and coherently write about a topic, that could be done in just about every other class, without actually having to study english as a class on it's own.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    85. Re:Correlation is not causation by micron · · Score: 1

      Maybe if he had taking Alg II, he could have done it more efficiently, and saved you some money!

    86. Re:Correlation is not causation by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Well to be fair, the classes at my high school were all fucked up, but we had Algebra I, II, and III (the latter incorporating Trigonometry), and then IB versions of Pre-Calc and Calc. That was probably due to the fact that the IB program doesn't mesh neatly with existing American high school curricula.

    87. Re:Correlation is not Causation by afidel · · Score: 1

      I think the difference was those who took AP Calc AB and tested out do poorly but those who took BC and tested into Calc II in college generally did ok from what I observed. Not that I'm a great one to judge, I had to take Calc four times before I found someone who could teach it in a way I could understand (not a math person!) but then I got all the way through diff eq.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    88. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The main problem with this is there will always be some kids who will never, ever be able to do algebra. I went to school with some.
      They will either drop out, or if they eventually do manage to graduate, end up in the military.

      And further, not everyone needs a college degree to be successful.

    89. Re:Correlation is not causation by RightwingNutjob · · Score: 1

      Go green: turn off your refrigerator.

      Do that and the stuff in there will.

    90. Re:Correlation is not causation by ceiling9 · · Score: 1

      The point is that forcing students who wouldn't otherwise take Algebra II to take it might not provide as much benefit as the correlation seems to indicate if there is not a direct causation, but instead a third variable effecting both. There may be root factors that occur much earlier in life that determine whether a student ends up being the type that would take Algebra II, and benefit from it - it may be more worthwhile to continue investigating to figure out what that root factor is.

    91. Re:Correlation is not causation by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      Most people donâ(TM)t use Algebra II in college, let alone in real life.

      Most people must really suck at life then. I mean do they really never build anything? Do they never need to figure out if a business activity will be profitable? Do they not think and dream? What is like to live that way?

      I guess you can go most of the time guessing and eyeballing your way through things I certainly do often enough, but Its also nice to know before you break out the plasma cutter, the modifications you are about to make to your car at least work on paper.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    92. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Don't put down those fields. You would be absolutely amazed at how much MORE difficult those are than, say, getting a BS in computer science. Yes, I said it, MORE difficult.

      You want to be a construction electrician, with the top end license? Here's the requirements:

        - Approximately 5 years of experience in the field to get your journeyman's license. Until you have that, you cannot work alone (except in a building without power, I believe). You also cannot apply power to any circuits without them having been examined by a journeyman (this rule gets broken pretty quickly once you advance and are trusted, though). You *must* work in an industrial/construction environment. Those working in a residential or commercial environment need not apply (They get a lesser license that does not permit them to work outside of their environments).
        - Attend college regularly during those 5 years to be able to pass your various exams so you can get your journeyman's license. I believe if you can pass them early, it's too bad, you get to sit in class anyways.
        - To pass the exams, you will basically not only memorize the entire electrical code, but you will need to know exactly WHY the electrical code requires those things, and, of course, you'll need an in-depth understanding of electricity. Not in-depth electronics knowledge, though, so you won't be building a space shuttle or solving K-Maps. But in-depth enough to understand Kirchoffs law, Reactance in a multi-phase stystem, calculate instantaneous load (including instantaneous power factor), etc.
        - Spend another minimum 3 years working as a journeyman, attending more classes in college so you can pass your masters exam.

      So, after a minimum of 7 years (and, honestly, for anyone who wants this badly, it's going to be 10 years, I have never heard of anyone doing this in 7) you can get a full masters C&M electrician license and can then do any work anywhere anytime in any conditions. I tried to be a C&M electrician. It is unbelievably difficult (mentally and physically) and I guarantee 50% of any students at a university would fail the exams, and 95% (Who am I kidding!? 99%) would fail the work conditions. I passed the exams, but the work conditions were just to much, so I went back to working on computers.

      To get a BS in computer science is easy in comparison. 2 2/3 years of classes and exams and you're done. You never actually need to *do* anything to prove your knowledge (of course, to get the Masters/PhD, you will need to).

      I hear plumbing is somewhat easier, and auto mechanic work is probably somewhere in between, though. But people assume those in professional occupations like these aren't smart, and they're wrong. It's not easy to get those jobs, and it's not easy to pass the top-level exams, although the basic ones are, admittedly, easy.

    93. Re:Correlation is not causation by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1
      As you allude to yourself, people who actually understand and can apply material do not need to memorize (per se) to pass; however, those who can neither understand/apply nor memorize cannot pass, thus it is the minimum standard.

      I'm not saying that those to whom abstract application does not come naturally cannot be productive, what I'm saying is I'm not sure that society's parents are willing to admit to themselves that some of their kids don't deserve diplomas or degrees and cannot hope for anything more than blue collar work at best.

      I also suspect there are serious issues with teaching methods, both that different teaching methods work for different students [...]

      Yes, and different methods is exactly what the mostly homogeneous public education system prevents, and why the minimum reform is the exertion of market pressures through vouchers. When public schools have to compete with private schools for enrollment and the money there attached, things will change for the better.

      [...] students don't care if they are not properly motivated (students aren't stupid: they know if the teacher is just "teaching to the test" and not actually teaching anything useful).

      Except that is exactly what happens in 90% of public school classrooms, and is a direct result of standardized tests and curriculum. Furthermore, kids ARE stupid when they don't work within a system that is fundamental to their success, even when it's broken. Yes, it boils down to being naught more than a societal hoop, but if jumping means the difference between middle and lower class, you jump. It's not like kids have something better to do with their time.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    94. Re:Correlation is not causation by demonlapin · · Score: 2

      This is about requirements, not options. When I was a teenager, you didn't have to require me to go to school. I didn't like it, mind you, but a necessary component of getting ahead in life is putting in effort to become good at things that people will pay you to do, and I was smart enough to understand this.

      "Education" in the abstract is one of the most overrated things around. A good elementary education covers the vast majority of people's needs. Anything beyond that ought to be up to parents and kids to decide - we certainly aren't doing any favors to 16 year olds who don't like school, don't do well in school, and serve primarily to disrupt other people from learning when we force them to go to class instead of going out and getting a job. Maybe the job will teach them that they ought to go back to school; maybe it will teach them that they're much better suited for the real world. Housing them in a brick building for two more years while they smoke weed, skip classes, and do nothing productive is a waste of money.

    95. Re:Correlation is not Causation by IICV · · Score: 1

      Also helps you stay not a single male; for some reason, my wife really seems to appreciate that I make breakfast for us both most mornings even though she makes fun of the way I make eggs*.

      But yeah, the fact that it is at all possible for people to graduate from high school without knowing how to cook anything more complicated than macaroni and cheese is an absolute failure of the modern educational system (and keep in mind that the "educational system" includes both parents and teachers).

      *I like them sunny-side up, but I want the whites to be cooked an the yolks not so I separate them out, cook the whites first, and then put the yolks on top for about a minute.

    96. Re:Correlation is not causation by PCM2 · · Score: 2

      As I've said elsewhere, at my school there was sort of an unspoken division between college-bound students and those who were not college-bound. For college-bound students, you didn't really need to make specific class requirements for graduation, because you don't get to be an engineer without studying math, you don't become a doctor without taking biology, etc. You won't get into upper-division college courses without fulfilling the prerequisites, so the kids who want to get out of college in four years start taking those classes in high school. It's the colleges -- and to a large degree, their parents -- who "require" it of them, not the high schools.

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    97. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 2

      In my group of friends, it's mostly the guys who can cook, although the one nutritionist can also cook (also, she's hot & dances).

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    98. Re:Correlation is not causation by mcmonkey · · Score: 1

      The second one is a fair and accurate credit for the courses taken and the work performed in them. GPA seems all wonderful and good until you realize--which nearly every student does--that an A in home economics is worth the same as an A in political-science or an A in Algebra I is equal to an A in Calculus II. There are absolutely no motivating incentives for pursuing a rigorous and comprehensive education from the perspective of a student. If Joe Slackoff can get a 3.8 GPA by taking slider courses and be looked upon favorably by colleges and perspective employers while Mia Workshard gets a 3.2 GPA taking every advanced course she can get her hands on and is looked down upon for the low GPA what is to encourage poor Mia? GPA should be thrown in the dustbin in favor of a system that highlights the general level of difficulty of the course while at the same time applies the traditional notion of progress within it. For instance, a "C" in Advanced Calculus I would be worth more than an "A" in Algebra II. A "B" in Music Composition II worth more than an "A" in P.E., etc.. The present system is little different than being given a choice between $100K/year to sit on your butt all day watching TV or $20K/year laying bricks.

      1) Colleges do look beyond GPA on transcripts. High school course selection is a better predictor of college success than GPA or SAT scores.

      2) The kids who sail through high school getting As by taking the easiest available course at every turn don't suddenly become motivated in college. They turn their 4.0 or 3.8 in college prep courses in to a scholarship to State U. They don't even apply to the top tier schools (or get turned down if they do).

      I barely finished in the top 10% of my graduating class. I got in to one very competitive college (& wait listed at another). The folks above me who were smarter/more studious also went to tier colleges. The folks with higher GPAs but poorer overall transcripts did not.

    99. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aaargh! We really need a +1 offtopic moderation.

    100. Re:Correlation is not causation by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      "Teaching to the test" is a talking point, not a valid criticism. It presupposes the system will be implemented badly. Anything and everything will fail when the execution is poor.

      No, it's perfectly reasonable given the history of these things. Demanding standardized tests without really knowing what makes for good tests or putting up the money to get good tests and then tying school budgets to test performance guarantees failure. Fact is, some kids need this stuff, and a lot don't. The best thing would be to acknowledge that and set up tracks to serve it. Don't look at trades as a lesser thing - it's honest work that pays well. Meanwhile, add a required course in home ec: basic food prep, budgeting, money management.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    101. Re:Correlation is not causation by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      I think the problem is, is that for some reason we have gotten to the point where a highschool diploma is something that everyone should have. The solution that most places have taken is to make it easy enough to get a diploma that just about anybody can do it, rather than set the standards based on what people should be learning, and then encouraging students to meet those standards. I think that we had a big problem in society, as soon as we started to require diplomas for everybody. The same is becoming true for university degrees.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    102. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that he's correct, it's an important critique of the article, and you don't seem to understand that.

    103. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At my high school you were allowed to pick a "business track" if you didn't want to take the college track that required more literature, math, and science. The business track replaced Algebra2/Trig/Calculus with a "Business Math" (essentially basic accounting skills with a checkbook, much as you suggested) and replaced literature with "Business English" which was mostly how to write resumes and cover sheets for TPS reports. But they were pretty much mutually exclusive sets of courses.

    104. Re:Correlation is not causation by DarkOx · · Score: 2

      This is going to sound cruel and like crazy librarian ranting but I the only reason that anti-education and anti-intellectual thinking persists is because people can get away with it!

      If not doing well in school (for a regular person not being disabled or something) doomed one to life of virtual slavery taking any job you can get for any pay someone might be willing to give you and usually not having enough to eat, I suspect few people would waste the opportunity public education affords them. Teenagers are not know for being at the top of the decision making game but even they can be driven by fear. Frankly the idea of being the guy under the bridge after mommy and daddy are gone is much scarier than collecting and unemployment check and watching cable TV half the day.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    105. Re:Correlation is not causation by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      Correlation only measures degree of relationship. Pearson's correlation coefficient (which is the most common type) only works on a linear relationship, there are matrix methods, polynomial rank methods, etc. for dealing with non linear relationships, or just generally being more robust, but generally more computationally intensive.

      If your correlation function is some goofy polynomial a casual treatment of mean differences (the most common pearson method) probably isn't going to produce anything sensible. But that doesn't mean the data isn't correlated or that it doesn't show dependence, only that you need more sophisticated tools.

    106. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a former high school math teacher, I agree 100%. The kids who are interested in science/math take Algebra II already. Forcing these college bound students to share the classroom with kids who care more about smoking weed and hooking up is not the way to go.

    107. Re:Correlation is not causation by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      The assumption that correlation and causation are interchangeable is so rampant in modern society that in any given story it is probably that someone has made that error.

      Just because the assumption is rampant, and everyone gets it wrong, does not mean everyone is getting it wrong because the assumption is rampant.

      Perhaps assuming they are the same thing when reading is indicative of people generally being idiots who can't reason their way out of a wet paper bag, whereas writing it wrong is simple because the person's audience is an idiot and they want to write sensational news pieces.

      correlation != causation ;)

      Seriously, though, you're right. I read 'Algebra II is the leading predictor of college and work success' and said 'that's one of the stupidest thing I've ever read'.

      In my school, at least, whether or not you took Algebra II or not was the most obvious indicator if you were in the college prep track or the vocational track. Making all the vocational students take Algebra II wouldn't change anything.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    108. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anubis+IV · · Score: 1

      Shhhh. We're getting something that is a good thing. They'll figure it out later on their own anyway.

    109. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Unkyjar · · Score: 1

      Your wife is right, it is a most unusual process to make sunny-side up eggs. I wouldn't call it wrong, just strange.

    110. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I took Geometry in 9th and algebra II in 10th, but they also offered statistics, and "for life" math in high school that covered the checkbook thing. I took statistics and pre-calculus after algebra II.

    111. Re:Correlation is not Causation by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      The other reason for learning basic cooking: It saves the single male a ton of cash. Home-cooked meals are easily $5-10 cheaper than the same meal made by a restaurant. That might not seem like a lot, but $20 a day over a year is $7,300. It's one thing to make the choice to spend that kind of money because you really like Chipotle or something, it's another thing entirely to make that choice because you don't know of any good alternatives.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    112. Re:Correlation is not causation by bkaul01 · · Score: 1

      OK, give me a concrete example of how that would play out on a math test. I'll acknowledge the difficulty in standardizing an exam for history or literature, but that's not what we're talking about here. Algebra is objective and has clearly correct or incorrect answers, and thus lends itself quite well to standardization of testing (as opposed to being best examined by evaluation of individual essays and the like). Reducing a history class to the level of memorizing dates and facts for a standardized test is a bad idea, I agree. But algebra? If your goal is to get students to perform well on a standardized algebra test, the easiest (only?) way to go about that is to teach them how to do algebra.

    113. Re:Correlation is not Causation by antdude · · Score: 1

      Heh, but did it help to you get a woman and laid? :P

      It didn't for me. :(

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    114. Re:Correlation is not Causation by anyGould · · Score: 1

      That's what Home Economics used to be...

      Up here HomeEc is actual sewing and cooking and such - there's a required Grade 11 class called "Career and Life Management" which (theoretically) covered budgeting and so on. Was a bit of a time-waste, if memory served.

      But judging from the example problems in the article, that's Grade 10 or 11 Math. It was required study here in Alberta (and still is, if the grumblings I hear are right).

    115. Re:Correlation is not Causation by anyGould · · Score: 1

      Should any of you younger ./ers have any hope of procreating. Learn to cook. It's like edible science.

      Agreed - you should be able to build yourself breakfast, lunch and dinner with a minimum of prepared foods. It's not hard, kids - and it'll save you cash, impress the ladies (and this is *definitely* where making the effort counts!), and keep you healthier than the folks who are living off day-old pizza and ramen noodles.

    116. Re:Correlation is not Causation by anyGould · · Score: 1

      Being the only straight male in class with 24 females was just a bonus.

      +1 Truth

    117. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is much more likely that the smarter students who are (or at least were, before the depression) more likely to succeed are also more likely to take Algebra II.

      In order to express this idea, you have to assume that there is such a thing as intelligence, and that some kids have more of it than others. In an education politics context that would mark you as a non-believer to be shunned. So an idea such as yours cannot be taken into consideration when making policy decisions about schools.

    118. Re:Correlation is not causation by FrankieBaby1986 · · Score: 1

      Sounds like your boat was poorly designed. Or cleverly designed.

      --
      ERROR: SIG NOT FOUND (A)bort, (R)etry, (F)ail?:
    119. Re:Correlation is not causation by lgw · · Score: 1

      Educators all agree that spending more money on education is a good thing! I never saw that one coming.

      When have educational standard increased? Have you seen a 6th grade textbook from 1850? Most modern high school graduates would struggle.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    120. Re:Correlation is not causation by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      Testing in general has problems but I would rather have at least "some" metric by which to gauge education. I have never seen a reasonably formulated argument justifying disparate testing systems. The only accomplishment achieved in having them different is preventing comparisons between educational systems thereby hindering people from learning what works and what doesn't. Every state is forced to experiment on their own to try and find (or perhaps not try) productive strategies for education.

      I understand the motivation or lack thereof regarding a kid and their education. However, this is why the adults need to step in and guide the kid on to bigger and better things with various incentives such as quality weighted GPAs. If kids were properly motivated and applied themselves to their primary education like they do in various Asian nations such as Japan and South Korea maybe there wouldn't be so much "catch-up" work needed if and when they get to college.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    121. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Although what we REALLY need a class on is "common sense" how to deal with money. Interest, balancing a 'checkbook'/banking account. Hell I'd settle for 'this is how you count back money.'

      Yup I agree. Add this to the list: A class on Logic 101. How to analyze arguments, see through specious analysis, do original research (he said that she said that he heard is RARELY a basis for true facts), and finally - the title of this thread - "CORRELATION IS NOT F***-ing CAUSATION", counter intuitive it may be.

    122. Re:Correlation is not causation by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      You are 100% correct. This is why we don't need fewer tests: we need better tests.

      Demanding standardized tests without really knowing what makes for good tests

      There is nothing wrong with citizens demanding a standardized test, or legislators passing the laws requiring them. But we cannot expect Citizen A or Senator Z to know what makes a good test any more than they know what makes a good road surface. They don't make the tests or build the roads. But when they mandate that a road should be built we expect the state highway administration to set appropriate guidelines for the road surface. And we should expect school administrators to hire people who design good tests.

      The responsibility lies with those school administrators and the teachers. If the teacher is teaching to the test, then they should be complaining that the test is not valid.

    123. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > And the uncomfortable elephant in the room is what do you do with the ones who can't specialize and can't apply? The ones who can barely pass rote memorization even with lowered standards? Pat them on the back and throw them at the nearest menial labor recruiter?

      Auto shop. Electric shop. Plumbing shop.

      And for the record that doesn't mean they won't do well in life. The oil change in my boat was quoted at 80$ an hour and cost me a total of $700, since the mechanic had to move a battery, remove the alternator to get around at things.

      Dude... you have an effing boat. Stop being so stingy and think that just an oil change on your boat for $700 means the mechanic lives pretty well.
      It is not an accurate comparison and YOU know that.

      Can that mechanic afford to own a boat like yours on that "outrageous" $700? That is a more valid comparison for success.

    124. Re:Correlation is not causation by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      I'm glad someone pointed this out. Most people assume that tests can never actually tell you anything, and that is flat out wrong. I felt this way until I worked for a company that made some really good tests and I saw the math and science that went into them. Creating a good test isn't just a function of slapping together a bunch of multiple choice questions about the material. A good test requires good psychometrics which is a blend of psychology and statistics that allows you to create a test that measures one's actual ability. That is a test where you can't just teach to the test.

      I would love to know if the standardized tests that people complain about are actually as bad as the public thinks. Teachers try to "teach to the test" but does that actually work? If so, on what tests? I know the SAT is not a test you can teach to - it is a test that measures the likelihood of success in college, and to that end the test is amazingly good at it. There is a very strong correlation between people who do well on the SAT and people who do well in college. Despite the complaints about it, the test does exactly what it was supposed to do. If you teach someone to do well on the SAT, you will consequently teach them to do well in college.

    125. Re:Correlation is not causation by PCM2 · · Score: 2

      I think it's legitimate to have a high school diploma be a certificate of basic competency for the workforce. If you have a diploma, a prospective employer can assume you can read at an adult level, spell decently well, and do enough math to handle a cash register. Hopefully you also know enough about science, history, and civics to get along in society. But does an auto mechanic really need to know how to compute the number of moles of exhaust that comes out of an engine when each piston fires? I don't think so.

      The problem is, modern high schools don't seem to even fulfill this role. "Social promotion" means kids are rarely ever held back a grade in K-12 these days, and once you turn 18, they basically have to turn you loose, ready or not. All a diploma means is that you played the game.

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    126. Re:Correlation is not Causation by PRMan · · Score: 1

      You are probably seeing the following differences:

      • You WANT to learn it now
      • You are older, more educated and understand more vocabulary and concepts
      • You are more patient and able to stick through tasks and have a sense of enjoyment from accomplishing a difficult task that ADD teenagers lack
      --
      Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
    127. Re:Correlation is not causation by rcw-home · · Score: 1

      I hear the complaint "teachers will teach to the exam" all the time as an argument against standardized testing. Damn right they will. If this results in a poor education, it means they weren't good exams (e.g., the SAT)

      I'd rather have a nation's graduates receive a wide variety of teaching experiences so that they are collectively exposed to millions and millions of different facts and concepts than have them collectively exposed to the same few thousand facts and concepts. That is something that a standardized test by its very nature simply cannot do.

    128. Re:Correlation is not causation by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Well even in these other countries with successful education systems, there's the part that people don't see. Ie, what happens with the students who aren't destined for college, and how is it determined that they're not destined for college. In the US we try to give everyone the same educational opportunities. In some countries however you're put onto an educational track based upon how good a student you are when younger. That is, a test in elementary or junior high school can determine your future career aspirations; you do badly and you're shunted off into a trade oriented high school.. The stress levels can be very high. Meanwhile those students off in the pre-university high schools seem to be doing very well which can cause observers to mistakenly think this performance applies to all students.

    129. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a restatement of the fact that correlation does not imply causation. Events could occur concurrently with high probability without either one of them causing each other.

      On a different note, Geometry, rather than Algebra, has been the way to teach logic for thousands of years. And yet no one complains about the fact that most high school graduates have never seen a geometry proof.

    130. Re:Correlation is not causation by lahvak · · Score: 1

      You have a good point. The problem is, if the test is implemented in such a way that you will, as you say, really have to know the material damn well, large number of students will find the exam to hard, you will end up with high failure rates, resulting in a huge public outcry against the test, and the test will end up being scrapped.

      --
      AccountKiller
    131. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Rasperin · · Score: 1

      You could have learnt proper English while you were at it.

      --
      WTF Slashdot, why do I have to login 50 times to post?
    132. Re:Correlation is not causation by avandesande · · Score: 1

      A real mechanic would have vacuumed the oil out.

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    133. Re:Correlation is not causation by avandesande · · Score: 1

      ....and geeks will suffer. Classes will be stuffed with kids that do not or are unable to learn ruining for those who can.

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    134. Re:Correlation is not causation by threecolorable · · Score: 1

      My high school's guidance counselor told us that university admissions departments do consider the difficulty of the classes you've taken as well as your GPA. He also told us that colleges will consider the high school you attended---so that someone who took AP classes and earned a 3.7 from a high school known for its challenging curriculum would be accepted over someone who has 4.0, but took only easy classes at a high school known for grade inflation. Additionally, some schools will use weighted GPAs, where AP classes or university courses taken while in high school are worth more than other classes (5 points for an A, 4 for a B and so on). So I think the college admissions process does at least attempt to consider course difficulty as well as grades. However, the way in which it does so is entirely subjective and undocumented---we had to take the counselor's word that taking more challenging classes would help our college applications. My experience (and that of other students from my high school, which prided itself on its high rate of acceptances at prestigious universities) generally supports his claims, but I agree that it would be preferable to have a system that takes course difficulty and progress over time into account in a clearer and more consistent way.

    135. Re:Correlation is not causation by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

      Khan academy has the right idea. School work should be mastery based, and everything goes into the computer, where it can be analyzed and tracked. Teach, test, and track what a student knows and what they can do. Classes should be given based on the topic to be mastered, and should be attended by those students who haven't yet mastered the subject, regardless of grade.

      When you graduate, your diploma prints out what you have mastered, not how many years you sat at a desk.

      You never flunk a "grade". You get 12 years of schooling, you can see your progress as you go along, and are given a printout of your levels of mastery when you do.

      I grant that you can't do everything this way. But you can do quite a lot, and that will grow every year. And you can have greater human interaction than you do now. You interact with all your fellow students in a joint endeavor to do the same thing - learn the topic at hand.

    136. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where and when I went to school, Home Ec was things involving the home day to day stuff, cooking, cleaning, sewing...

      Personal Finance was the class where people balanced checkbooks, budgeting and stuff. I have no idea actually. I took Accounting instead since that seemed more usable in a career.

      I learned everything I needed to from home and working in a restaurant.

    137. Re:Correlation is not Causation by guruevi · · Score: 1

      I'm still surprised at US schools that have optional courses. Where I went to school there were no options or choices to make for the basic classes. You had to take Algebra, Calculus, Geometry etc. all together it took up 10 hours/week (36 hours of classes per week) and included some things the US only starts with in classes for bachelors and up.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    138. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd be happy if our politicians and journalists could distinguish between a billion and a trillion, and if the average voter recognized what a fraud the 2011 budget fight is.

    139. Re:Correlation is not Causation by ejasons · · Score: 1

      On the contrary. Highschool level Geometry is important. It is where you are taught to derive proofs based upon postulates and theorems. It is the process that is important, not the results, per se.

      I chatted with a new high school math teacher last Thanksgiving, and made that exact statement. He then stated that they don't teach proofs anymore. I guess that there aren't enough pictures...

    140. Re:Correlation is not causation by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but many people can do all those things without a highschool diploma. Hence all the highschool kids working those jobs that just require cash register and basic english skills. If you have a high school diploma, and are just working the checkout at Target, then you are vastly overqualified. I'm not sure if there are a lot of jobs you are qualified for. Most jobs that exist seem to either require no education past grade 8, or require at least some kind of basic vocational training above high school. It would seem that it would make more sense if you could just go to a vocational school after grade 10, instead of spending the extra 2 years in highschool. I know they used to do it. Quebec still only goes to grade 11. I think it's a great idea.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    141. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      I'm still surprised at US schools that have optional courses.

      I'm surprised that there are places with no options.

      Actually, no, I'm not.

      I'm also not surprised that there are places where different courses are "optional".

      And maybe I'm sounding immune to surprise -- but I not, really -- but I'm not surprised that other places within and without the US have different "basics" than i experienced. I mean, of course the "basics" aren't optional. They're the "basics", right? But is it possible that the "basics" could vary by location?

      . . . and included some things the US only starts with in classes for bachelors and up.

      And then you added this little condescending quip. Thanks.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    142. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking of which, isn't just teaching the test perfect for the lower maths since all you really need is memorization of formulas to pass everything up to...calculus i guess? That's pretty much where I stopped doing maths in high school, and it was really the only math I had trouble with.

      Everything before it I could either figure out why an equation worked or just brute force my way through exams by memorizing formulas. No idea why, but I found trig the easiest math.

      Is it possible to just brute force memorization your way through high school and essential college maths? So wouldn't just "teaching the test" be perfect here?

      Also, a note on SATs. Yeah they're pretty terrible. I had remarkably average grades throughout high school and university, but I pretty much aced my SATs. Of course...this is largely because I'm good at tests but incredibly lazy at working on homework so there is that.

      Wow jeez, my focus is terrible today. My brain's all in a fog so my words are all confused.

    143. Re:Correlation is not Causation by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      It's the one with trigonometry.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    144. Re:Correlation is not causation by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Christ, did it take all year to work? I can't imagine how you could get decent throughput with an Archimedean screw that small. A plain bit of semi-rigid tubing hooked to a pump would seem to work better.

    145. Re:Correlation is not causation by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      To a point yes, other factors are considered but there's an interesting trend towards drawing a line in the sand such that anything under a certain bar doesn't even get consideration. This is particularly true with respect to entry level career positions but even with many colleges.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    146. Re:Correlation is not Causation by gander666 · · Score: 1

      The Baby Jesus cries to hear that. I fear for the future of the nation.

      --
      Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress ... but I repeat myself. - Mark T
    147. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other words: Students who are more likely to take advanced classes-- despite not being needed for graduation-- are more likely to be successful. After this change takes affect, Algebra III/Pre-Calculus (or whatever they're calling it these days) will be the new predictor of success, and in 40 years our children will be reading all about this exciting new idea that if AP Calculus were made mandatory, more people would go on to be successful...

    148. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Im all for making it a requirement, but saying this and making it happen are 2 different things. Whats sad is that most people who want this to happen arent looking at the whole picture; you need good teachers and you need to have proper preparation K - 8. I also agree with the poster who said that practical/consumer math should be taught at all levels.

    149. Re:Correlation is not causation by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      High school course selection is a better predictor of college success than GPA or SAT scores.

      I had always heard that SAT/ACT were among the better predictors of college success. Do you happen to remember where you read this?

      And don't knock the State U's. In nearly every case, it's better to go to your state's flagship university on a scholarship than to pay full freight at a non-Ivy. Long-term, the earnings differences are mostly determined by skill and intelligence, not undergrad institution.

    150. Re:Correlation is not causation by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Yep. Teaching to the test is only bad if the test sucks. Of course, I'm biased - I'm a doctor, and medicine is a great field for someone whose only skill is being good at school. If you're a teenager reading this, and you're thinking about it, I'd recommend dental school, as their incomes are basically comparable and don't involve call or weekends. But if you want a good job that pays well, and you're really good at school, you can be a very successful physician. It's not well understood among the general populace that surgeons (e.g.) aren't chosen for their technical skill (they haven't had the chance to develop it before they're selected), but for their test scores.

    151. Re:Correlation is not causation by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Algebra II? EE's use imaginary numbers, and hyperboloid surfaces occur in manufacturing (or so I'm told), but I can't think of anything from Algebra II that I've used in real life. I did the quadratic formula in Algebra I. Geometry and trig were useful. I really enjoyed discrete math and calculus. But Alg2? Total waste of time.

    152. Re:Correlation is not causation by mspohr · · Score: 1

      It was actually fairly efficient. Oil is viscous (especially when cold) so it moved up the narrow tube quite nicely. The "screw" was just a coiled wire in a narrow plastic tube about 4mm dia. It was powered by an electric drill so it rotated at a fairly high rate.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    153. Re:Correlation is not causation by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Yes, the wonderful thing about the US is that failing at high school doesn't mean failing at life. "Intellectuals" gave us the abattoir of the twentieth century; that alone is reason to be suspect of them.

    154. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Cylix · · Score: 1

      I actually used it a good deal during my field engineering days to calculate distances for certain things.

      I did quite fine later on during college and even learned far more appreciate for abstract mathematics. In this particular case she really was quite the devil.

      Many years later I would get even with her. While out on a bit of a date I ran into the witch who was also out at the same restaurant. Now, my date and myself were about to leave when I noticed HER there with someone else. In fairness, her husband had been put into jail many years ago for man slaughter. He struck someone with a ketchup bottle and it apparently did the poor fellow in.

      On my way out I informed her waitress that the woman at her table was quite literally shouting for some ketchup and she really should hurry.

      I'm not really about being the better man, but I do still get a chuckle out of it to this day.

      --
      "You should always go to other people's funerals; otherwise, they won't come to yours." -- Yogi Berra
    155. Re:Correlation is not causation by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Forgive me if I'm wrong, but doesn't the design of the Archimedean screw depend on low viscosity? I just assumed that it wouldn't be able to pick up much oil with each turn, nor would the oil ascend much up the screw. Ah, well, the specific design makes a difference.

    156. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The training you get from that level of math develops your symbolic manipulation skills which help you understand and deal with pretty much everything else.

      Unfortunately folks that spew out "correlation is not causation" so quickly, do not actually understand of what they speak either. Causation does exhibit correlation, so it becomes nothing more than a shallow debating technique rather than anything insightful to say.

      Of course I use the math from high school, undergrad and grad school daily still, 30 years after graduating. But I'm an engineer who does really work for a living.

    157. Re:Correlation is not Causation by buchner.johannes · · Score: 1

      I remember not doing so hot in geometry

      And now you are on slashdot.

      --
      NB: The message above might reflect my opinion right now, but not necessarily tomorrow or next year.
    158. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And algebra II isn't already required? 0_o

      Perhaps my kids will get a better schooling at Khan Academy afterall.

      Ummm ya. I grew up in Montana, we have it as a graduation requirement. Dunno about other places, I'd assumed it was required but I guess not. Well, not in California, all you need to graduate high school is a pulse... and that is sometimes optional.

    159. Re:Correlation is not Causation by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      More likely it is a random correlation. What they are looking at "the workforce is lagging in the percentage of younger workers with college degrees" is likely driven by other factors. The rising cost and dumbing down of the US college system, parents who can afford a college education does not mean their offspring will be successful (marrying pretty but stupid has a price). Some of the real dummies you see in public with college degrees is appalling.

      Just like the current illogic of not so bright parents, that it's the teachers fault when their child fails (performance based pay for teachers is going to have a huge price, when teachers figure out it is profitable to victimise the not so bright students and get them kicked out of their class and or school. Dumb but pretty teachers sleeping with principles to get the smart kids in their class).

      So motivated students who can do algebra II and have to pay for their education themselves are more likely to succeed. Now even smarter students will look at global pricing of a college education and immigration opportunities to best exploit their skills and avoid crippling debt with limited job opportunities and a developing 'the employee is the enemy of profits' attitudes.

      Right wing politics, the stupid, it burns.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    160. Re:Correlation is not Causation by nobodie · · Score: 1

      I beat all of you to it. My sone is in second grade in China. He is doing long division, multiplication with terms up to 12x12 and has word problems with variables already. Simple ones of course, but the entry level stuff he is doing at 8 years old is where in relation to US education?

      The funny part of the story is that my Chinese colleagues all insisted that western kids "can't" do math like Chinese kids can. I don't even tell them he is in the top 3 in his class (in Chinese, Math and English.)

      --
      Subversion of spatial scale luxury decoration ideas.
    161. Re:Correlation is not Causation by White+Flame · · Score: 1

      I fully agree with the cooking, as well as the ability to operate the laundry machines and dishwasher. And every car owner, male or female, should know how to change a flat tire and check the oil.

    162. Re:Correlation is not Causation by White+Flame · · Score: 1

      What you need to do with the sunny-side up eggs is fry them normally, but right before they're done splash a bit of water in the pan and cover it up immediately. The steam will help cook the top layer of the egg whites, getting rid of the "egg snot" effect, but the yolks will still be runny.

      Yes, I learned this from my mother. When I moved out of my house, I asked her for recipes and various other householdy tips, so I know what the heck to do in my bachelor pad besides be a health hazard.

    163. Re:Correlation is not causation by bungo · · Score: 1

      Does anybody know one of those free online class sites with a decent set of math classes, preferably geared more toward programmers?

      I already have a degree in computing, but I've gone back to study a BSc in Math. Most people studying with me, to supplement the given material, make use of the Khan Academy http://www.khanacademy.org/
      and also the MIT OpenCourseWare http://videolectures.net/mit_ocw/

      Khan Academy is good for reinforcing concepts, but the MIT OpenCourseWare is really good for straight out teaching.

      I love the Classical Mechanics lectures by Walter Lewin - he's an amazing lecturer, although you'll already have to be good with calculus and differential equations to be able to easily follow.

      MIT also has single and multivariable calculus, linear algebra and differential equations courses. If you completed all of them, you'll have a great basis for further math.

      I'm sure that someone here has taken those classes in person and can vouch for how good they are.

      --
      "The best part? I became an ordained minister while not wearing pants." -- CleverNickName
    164. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I hear the complaint "teachers will teach to the exam" all the time as an argument against standardized testing. Damn right they will. If this results in a poor education, it means they weren't good exams (e.g., the SAT)"

      There's nothing wrong with standardized testing within reason but it's gotten out of hand. In Florida students take FAIR testing every 9 weeks, which can run up to six weeks to complete (on top of quarterly and semester exams), then there's FCAT which determine how much funding a school receives regardless of whether that school is in a rich or poor neighborhood. The FCAT's have become so important that it takes over curriculum for weeks in advance. Teaching to a test might help kids passed it but tests are best just a small random sampling of a subject area which leaves those parts tested on largely forgotten. Now there's new high stakes testing being implemented through computer labs setup across the state. As if that wasn't enough our new Tea Party governor has just mandated that we setup more standardized tests across the state without any federal funding. Too much testing is killing education since there's little time to teach anything else. In short too much testing is not moving education forward it's limiting it to random sampling of what's being tested.

    165. Re:Correlation is not causation by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

      The oil change in my boat was quoted at 80$ an hour and cost me a total of $700, since the mechanic had to move a battery, remove the alternator to get around at things.

      And how much of that $700 did the actual worker recieve? And how wonderful is his health insurance?

    166. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Jimmy+King · · Score: 1

      A bit late on my comment, but I had similar issues with math in highschool. I just barely passed algebra II and intro to trig (I think it was). It was all memorize this, memorize when to use that, this equals that just because. I couldn't remember a damned thing. I also took physics in highschool, in fact I skipped ahead in science classes and took physics a year early. It was the exact same math, but with some real life application and explanation applied to it and I was getting A's without even trying.

    167. Re:Correlation is not Causation by Slime-dogg · · Score: 1

      One of the required classes for me was "Consumer Economics," which dealt with all of those things. I also was one of those who did all the various AP calc classes and stuff.

      I also had baking and sewing, but I took those in junior high.

      --
      You need to restart your computer. Hold down the Power button for several seconds or press the Restart button.
    168. Re:Correlation is not causation by thtrgremlin · · Score: 1

      In communities where there is already motivation to "be all you can be", this new requirement will mean that marginally successful students will not graduate. In less motivated communities it will be a motivator to drop out sooner. If you want to encourage more students to take Algebra II, try convincing them on the merits, not with threats. This plan works on the same flawed logic of price fixing.

      As long as people seem to be foaming at the mouth to impose all kinds of "requirements" on people, why not require that all high schools make available the opportunity to meet the states high school graduation requirements, and let them graduate.

      Relating to price fixing, minimum wage will always be unlivable, and "high school graduate" will always be "unskilled".

      --
      Want Big Business out of government? Take away the incentive and start by getting government out of big business!
    169. Re:Correlation is not causation by mcmonkey · · Score: 1

      The best I could find quickly were articles/summaries like this:
      http://www.higheredmorning.com/and-the-best-predictor-of-college-success-is
      http://fairtest.org/sat-i-faulty-instrument-predicting-college-success

      Mostly they refer to the combination of grades & course selection. My own personal biased unscientific interpretation of these results is, kids who take easy classes to get good grades in high school continue to take easy classes in college. Kids whose grades aren't as good because they push themselves with harder classes in high school continue to take harder classes in college.

      Also, with regards to college admission:
      http://www.usnews.com/mobile/blogs/the-college-admissions-insider/2011/3/14/qa-on-high-school-course-selections.html
      "The answer depends on the level of selectivity at the colleges to which your son is applying. Most selective institutions—and all of the most highly selective colleges—expect students to move to the next logical level of rigor each year and to perform well in those courses. At less selective schools, his course selection will be less consequential to the admissions outcome."

    170. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll second this. Also regarding motivation, I had an advisor in school who didn't recommend me for AP science (maybe physics, don't remember the specific class), despite good grades. I went to talk to him about it, he told us that he didn't "recommend" it for anyone. Students who wanted to take the class would come ask about it. He was right, of course, but it was a lesson in motivation and asking for what I want.

    171. Re:Correlation is not causation by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

      Ooh - nice catch. Dependent causation eventually shows up somewhere as correlation.

      Buddhists Like this too.

      --
      My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
    172. Re:Correlation is not causation by Transaction7 · · Score: 1

      Right. The students who have been given any parenting, and anything resembling education and guidance at school, atre already taking Algebra II. Actually, while taking and succeeding at Algebra II may be a good predictor of success in high school, college, work, and life, the one and only variable that really, consistently, affects and contributes materially to, as well as predicting, such outcomes and each of them, is parental interest and involvement. Try correlating the kids who take and succeed at Algebra II with active parental interest and involvement sometime. I took, and passed, four years of math in high school, which, back then, pre-Sputnik, did not include Analytic Geometry, Pre-Calculus, and Calculus, or any computer courses. I loved it, despite knowing that I wasn't the best math student and had some trouble with it. My 99 3/4th percentile verbal scores got me offers from several good engineering schools, MIT, m first choicek bieng the only one smart enough to turn me down with a 70th percentile math score, What nobody told me, until I hit college and, having repeatedly tested out of freshman college math, took Analytic Geometry and Calculus, was that, as the grader put it when he sent me a note to "See the professor immediately!" was that I had been and was "doing all the problems a-- backwards." One morning, the professor opened with "With a fifth-order determinant, we can demonstrate . . . " and I raised my hand and asked him what that was, he said two words, the first of which was "Oh." I knocked a letter grade off my undergraduate average, and nearly killed myself, trying, repeatedly, to pass those courses. I did manage a B in Statistics. We didn't learn until many years later, after I had switched majors and practiced law for years, that I had been born without a piece of brain structure crucial to higher math. We had always attributed any problems to a known uncorrectable congenital neurological vision problem which had got me refused admission to the Washington, D. C. school system. The school systems in this state university town and the county seat turn out winners in robotics competition, etc., sponsored by a business enterprise, and have some good teachers, and students, but way too many of their students, including some I hired and some we couldn't use, couldn't alphabetize, spell "secretary" or "Algebra," compose a proper simple business letter in WordPerfect or Word, or otherwise, or balance a checkbook, etc. The salutatorian, second in her class, at another nearby school district got a scholarship to the state university here and had to be put into both remedial reading and remedial math. I have friends on the verge of completing doctorate degrees in math and sciences who can't find jobs at living pay in their fileds and have ended up roofing, driving a truck, and two are teaching English in China. People who wee making six-figure incomes in computer science are working temporary gigs at anything they can get, about $10 per hour, and have lost their homes. The number and percentage of boys going on to college has dropped like a rock. Half the people I know are working well below their eduction, skill, and experience level, and practically everybody I know working a legitimate job or jobs is making less than htey used to. The official figures for unemployment, under-employment, inflation, etc. are sick jokes.

  5. Correlation is not causation by Chemisor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Come on, people! We should all know this already. Just because "Algebra II" is a predictor of success, doesn't mean that it causes the success. It is much more likely that the smarter students who are (or at least were, before the depression) more likely to succeed are also more likely to take Algebra II. Making everyone take it is going to have about as much success as cargo cults did.

  6. Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Correlation != Causation. Perhaps those intrinsically more likely to succeed in college and the workplace happen to be the same kinds of people who *wanted* to take Algebra II. This does not mean forcing Algebra II on anyone else will help them succeed.

  7. That's nice by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    Who's going to pay for it? Every state is cutting funding and increasing class sizes. You don't just learn this stuff on your own, and how the heck is a teacher with 45 students (2 or 3 special needs and a few ESL ones mixed in) going to pull that off?

    Of course, if your goal is to give public schools impossible goals so they can fail and be replaced by private schools, this is a great idea. It'll mix well with no child left behind. And the great thing about private schools is they get to expel their problem students, so they're numbers always look great!

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:That's nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree that you don't learn this stuff on your own. All you need is someone to keep order in the class and to point the students at the Khan academy and you are basically done. If that doesn't work the kid is probably a special needs kid anyway.

      Problem students should be expelled. The only issue with private schools is the cost.

    2. Re:That's nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No kidding. American kids have better things to do than try to succeed. Besides, math is hard. See, e.g., http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbie.

    3. Re:That's nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not being able to expel troublesome (thats' a kind word for what I'm talking about) students is part of the problem with the education system in America. I know a teacher who regularly gets told to 'fuck off' by her middle-school students and can't do a thing about it, especially when contacting the parent gets the same answer.

      My proposal is simple - your kid is continuously disrespectful and proving to be a distraction to students who actually give a shit, he/she gets kicked out of school. It is then the responsibility of the parent to provide home schooling or send the kid somewhere that will put up with his crap. The kid can apply to join school again the next school year. Problem solved - teachers regain some authority and respect, kids who want to learn get to do so.

    4. Re:That's nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I learned it on my own so that I could take a math contest 1/3 into the semester. That said, if you want to teach a class of 45 students, you need to ensure they are close to the same level - collect the 2-3 Special Needs from each class into a 10-15 class and the few ESL into a 20-25 class taught by a native (Spanish presumably) speaker and crank the others up to 60 students and you will have better results. Realistically, you will probably need Alg II Pt 1 and Pt 2 for the slow kids that aren't even ready for Algebra I as freshmen. This is the reason that some places don't require it - Pre-Algebra, Algebra I Pt 1, Algebra 1 Pt 2, Geometry is often a remedial sequence. Realistically, it is a reflection that if you enter high school 1-2 grade levels behind in math you are unlikely to be successful in life.

    5. Re:That's nice by Larryish · · Score: 1

      The word you are looking for isn't "They're", which is a contraction of "They Are".

      The word you were seeking is "their".

      Maybe you shouldn't have spent so much time watching Springer.

      YOU = edumacatishiun FAIL.

      Now go buy some more Hamburger Helper with your EBT card, loser.

  8. Require? by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

    I guess I'm surprised it's not simply offered.
    Last I recall the math sequence 'way back in my day' was Algebra 1 - Geometry - Algebra 2 - Trig.

    So even if Trig fell off the map Algebra 2 would be senior year.

    --
    My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
    1. Re:Require? by PCM2 · · Score: 1

      At my school, Algebra 2 and Trig were one semester each. If you took them both Junior year, you could take Calculus your senior year.

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    2. Re:Require? by kehren77 · · Score: 1

      The normal course of Math classes for student at my high school was Algebra 1, Geometry, Algebra 2, Functions & Trig.

      Those of us in the advanced math group took Algebra 1 in 8th grade. Then high school was Algebra 2, Geometry, Functions & Trig, Calculus.

      It would have been so much better to have Geometry before Algebra 2. I spent Geometry class doing work for other classes and reading novels because it was so easy after Algebra 2. It would have been better to just skip Geometry at that point and go straight to Functions & Trig. Then spend 2 years working on Calculus.

    3. Re:Require? by LandDolphin · · Score: 1

      What is "Algebra I" and "Algebra II" You can call it anything you want. I'd me more interested in knowing what standards/concepts were being taught. In my school it went Algebra I, Algebra II, GTA (Geometry, Trigonometry, Algebra III) or Geometry as a stand alone, Pre-Calc, and if you were advanced, Calc I at the Community College. Algebra I and II were required.

      --
      Spelling and Grammar errors have been added to this post for your enjoyment
    4. Re:Require? by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      Last I recall the math sequence 'way back in my day' was Algebra 1 - Geometry - Algebra 2 - Trig.

      The old gag I remember from my bright college days was: "you never really understand geometry until you've had trig, you don't really understand trig until you've had calculus, you don't understand calculus till differential equations and you don't really understand differential equations."

      p.s. I know you can, it's a joke after all.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    5. Re:Require? by cranil · · Score: 0

      I'm not American. What exactly does Algebra I and Algebra II have? I'm guessing Algebra I is simple stuff like (a+b)^2 factorization etc. Is Algebra II counting and discrete math?

    6. Re:Require? by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      This may well suggest that the pace at which people are being taught mathematics is too slow?

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    7. Re:Require? by PCM2 · · Score: 1

      The Algebra II courses I've seen typically start by examining linear equations, finding the slope of a line and stuff like that, then move on into topics like factoring polynomials, polynomial arithmetic, solving systems of equations and inequalities, matrices, and so on, and I think a lot of classes end with conic sections. Maybe the most important parts of Algebra II, though, are that this is the level of math where they really start having you graph a lot of stuff (which becomes even more important for Trigonometry and beyond) and that Algebra II introduces the concept of functions. In my experience functions are not really given a ton of emphasis at this stage, but by the time you start Calculus you're supposed to have one of those "ah-haaaaa" moments where all the earlier topics start to come together.

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    8. Re:Require? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Algebra 1 - Geomtry - Algebra 2" is a typical "college track" at U.S. public schools... typically the bare-minimum requirement for graduation is something like "3 years of math".

    9. Re:Require? by PCM2 · · Score: 1

      Geometry definitely came before Algebra II at my school, and I think that's the way they should do it, too. The important thing wasn't the Pythagorean theorem, it was doing proofs and the logical thinking habits you picked up along the way.

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
  9. It's Not That Hard, Guys by Conrthomas · · Score: 0

    I'm a senior in first-year Calculus, and let me say that this is a great idea. Calculus is in fact, mostly algebra, as I have seen. As long as it's not what's called "CPM Algebra" which I had to deal with in 10th grade. So, as long as it's a good curriculum, YES.

  10. This is a must by PmanAce · · Score: 1

    For slashdotters, the amount of algebra we use knowingly and unknowingly is much higher than one thinks in our daily lives. The amount of folks that use it wrong to come at their conclusions while chatting with them is even higher. I really hope they do require this.

    I for one would welcome our new Algebraic Overlords.

    --
    Tired of my customary (Score:1)
  11. Personal info disclosure here by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    Um, I took Algebra II in high school, and it was required.

    In 1971.

    When did the nimrods decide to ditch that? And in favor of what other requirements?

    Actually, I'm afraid the answer will annoy me to no end.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    1. Re:Personal info disclosure here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it helps, modern Algebra II focuses less on solving polynomial equations and somewhat more on multiculturalism and superficial attempts at inclusiveness. Nobody's teaching actual math anymore, it might make the kids who have trouble with it feel stupid.

    2. Re:Personal info disclosure here by gander666 · · Score: 2

      I will second this. When did Algebra II fall off the curriculum? It was not optional in my highschool. Algebra I, Geometry, Algebra II were minimum requirements. Those interested in sciences and college took pre-calculus and Trigonometry as their fourth year (unless they qualified for the AP calculus)

      I am shaking my head.

      --
      Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress ... but I repeat myself. - Mark T
    3. Re:Personal info disclosure here by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      Yes. And my niece who teaches fifth grade last year was required to teach vertice edge graphs and parallel/series resistance. to meet state testing requirements.

      Not Ohm's Law, mind you. Just series/parallel resistance.

      I had to go look up vertice edge graphs. What the &*($ does a fifth grader need those for? The state exam? Stupid.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    4. Re:Personal info disclosure here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the &*($ does a fifth grader need those for?

      Unmatched parenthesis are totally unacceptable in any language, even in pretend swear words. You, Good Sir, should be flogged and then force to write lisp.

    5. Re:Personal info disclosure here by i.r.id10t · · Score: 1

      Yup, teaching to the test. Of course, teaching to the test is perfectly valid and works great .... if you have a good test. Problem is that not many states that do this have good tests.

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
    6. Re:Personal info disclosure here by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      Context, my cowardly friend. As with so many of your ilk, you ignore the context.

      You should be forced to register. Or are you merely too lazy to log in?

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    7. Re:Personal info disclosure here by budcub · · Score: 1

      I graduated from a Maryland High School (a Catholic private one though) in 1984 and I'm pretty sure Algebra II was required as well, along with Geometry and Chemistry. I don't remember if Trig was required or not. People who were bad at math struggled to get the requirements out of the way. They would take one year of "Algebra 1 part 1" and then Algebra 1 part 2". Most everyone took Algebra 1 Freshman year, Algebra 2 sophomore year, Geometry/Trig Junior year (1 semester for each course) and were highly encouraged to take either Pre-Calc or Calculus 1 their senior year. I took Calc 1 but it was nothing like college level Calc 1. What took us 3-4 weeks to cover in high school we covered in 1-1.5 weeks in college. The pace was way too fast for me and I had to drop the course.

      Graduation requirements come and go with whatever is in fashion. Studying a foreign language was optional back then but it might be mandatory now. One religion class I had made us do some volunteer charity work and I think now it is a requirement for graduation, although I don't know if this applies to state schools as well.

      Even though foreign language was optional when I was there, we were told that some colleges required it and we were encouraged to take two years of it. They offered Spanish, French, and Latin. I really wanted to learn a cool language like German, or Japanese but they didn't offer anything like that.

    8. Re:Personal info disclosure here by russotto · · Score: 1

      Um, I took Algebra II in high school, and it was required.

      In 1971.

      When did the nimrods decide to ditch that? And in favor of what other requirements?

      A few years after they ditched classic literature, which resulted in people using "nimrod" as a general purpose insult (it originally meant "mighty hunter", after the Biblical Nimrod; Bugs Bunny's use of the name for Elmer Fudd was sarcastic)

      Anyway, when I went to HS in the late 1980's, you could get through with 2 "Basic Math" or "General Math" (a.k.a arithmetic) courses and that was it. But for Cowpie High, that was likely always the case.

    9. Re:Personal info disclosure here by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      From yourdictionary.com:

      "nimrod (nmrd)
      noun
      1.also Nimrod A hunter.
      2.Informal A person regarded as silly, foolish, or stupid.
      Origin: After Nimrod. Sense 2, probably from the phrase “poor little Nimrod,” used by the cartoon character Bugs Bunny to mock the hapless hunter Elmer Fudd."

      I used the casual or slang form. I know who Nimrod was from the Bible.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  12. We might be better off.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If everyone knows more algebra, we might be better off as a society. But there is still only so much room at the tail of the 'success' distribution.

  13. It would be nice if the summary... by hipp5 · · Score: 1

    ...told me what exactly Algebra II is. Whatever it is, we don't call it that where I live.

    1. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      im guessing its an American thing .. like Web 2.0

    2. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by xs650 · · Score: 1

      It is normally the 2nd year of Algebra in American High Schools.

    3. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not particularly useful. What does Algebra II cover? If our math courses usually went up to Trig, did our Algebra course likely cover most of this 'algebra II'? Some of our kids had calculus by the time they left (the ones smarter than me), what about them?

    4. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by Imrik · · Score: 1

      If I remember correctly it was algebra for things more complicated than linear equations, powers, roots, etc.

    5. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by drb226 · · Score: 1

      Well we used to teach just Algebra, but then we improved it and now it is web scale so we call it Algebra II. (???)

    6. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by stealth_finger · · Score: 2

      ...told me what exactly Algebra II is.

      IT'S AWESOME, didn't you see it? Wellm you remember at the end of the first one where Trigonometry had a gun to Calculus's head and Differentiation was fighting the zombie and vampire hoards. Well the Theory gang arrive just in the nick of time, destroy Probability and Statistics to put an end to the the Dynamic Systems and save the day. The 3D is EPIC

      --
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    7. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

      Solving equations, graphing, factoring polynomials, reducing polynomials, square roots, cube roots, n-th roots.
      Imaginary numbers, complex numbers, quadratic equation.

      Matrix math.

    8. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by vlm · · Score: 1

      It is normally the 2nd year of Algebra in American High Schools.

      No kidding... You sure its not the third year? How bout "What topics do they cover?"

      I'm guessing what we called Algebra in the 80s got dumbed down and perhaps they no longer cover the quadratic equation, etc, in "algebra" anymore. So, Algebra II would pretty much be the second semester of what we used to call Algebra.

      If its not that, then I'm not sure what Algebra II could be. We were offered four classes, to be taken in strict order, Geometry, Algebra, Pre-calculus (I guess the word "trigonometry" doesn't fit in a CHAR(16) column or something stupid like that), Calculus. We also had remedial general math class for the folks whom never learned fractions, or in some cases couldn't add. Kids had to pass 2 years of math to graduate H.S. The "standard track" kids therefore took geometry and algebra, I continued on into trig and calc with the college track kids.

      I wish they offered some more useful classes. Statistics or discrete math would have been a heck of a lot more useful to the average citizen.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    9. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by vlm · · Score: 1

      If I remember correctly it was algebra for things more complicated than linear equations, powers, roots, etc.

      You mean things like trigonometric identities? Basically a renamed trigonometry class, then.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    10. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by vlm · · Score: 1

      Solving equations, graphing, factoring polynomials, reducing polynomials, square roots, cube roots, n-th roots.
      Imaginary numbers, complex numbers, quadratic equation.

      Matrix math.

      If you take all that stuff out of my algebra class, that would have left.... Um... the concept of what is a variable and variable substitution, and not much else? I'm struggling to think what would remain in Alg I if that all got pulled out into Alg II.

      There was a "pre-algebra" class expected to be taken in middle school that covered stuff like matrix math and imaginary numbers, complex numbers, etc. Perhaps the order has been inverted and they do that stuff after algebra now instead of before?

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    11. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by a_mari_usque_ad_mare · · Score: 2

      According to the article it covers quadratic equations, logarithms, and imaginary numbers. I took it in grade 11 (out of 12) in the province of Ontario as MCR3U; IIRC it also included misc. function theory, some financial and compound interest stuff, and conic geometry.

      --
      The map is not the territory.
    12. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by PCM2 · · Score: 1

      If our math courses usually went up to Trig, did our Algebra course likely cover most of this 'algebra II'?

      Yes. At my school the class was just called Advanced Algebra. Typically it introduces concepts like solving systems of equations, more complex graphing topics such as graphing ellipses, matrices, maybe conic sections... stuff like that. It's normally a prerequisite for Trigonometry classes.

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    13. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      Algebra II, as the second year of algebra in most US secondary schools, focuses most heavily on studying polynomial functions, with topics like finding zero points, inflection points, intersections with other functions, factoring of cubic and higher-order expressions, and locating asymptotes. There's sometimes some discussion of exponential and logarithmic functions as well, although those often wait for the trigonometry course.

      A typical college-bound US student would study algebra I in their 8th or 9th year of school, followed by geometry (usually basic Euclidian stuff, but also introduces the concept of mathematical proof), followed by algebra II, followed by trigonometry, followed by an introductory calculus course if time allows.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    14. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

      It all depends on how they set up the classes. Some schools may just set up what matrices are in Algebra I, but then show what they're good for in Algebra II. (rref, etc).

      I just looked up my old high school's "Course Descriptions"

      Pre-Algebra (7th Grade for me. 8th grade for 'normal'. 9th grade if you were behind):
      Pre-algebra provides the mathematical background, skills and thinking process necessary for the successful completion of Algebra. Topics include (1) number sense and computation, (2) algebra and functions, (3) geometry, (4) measurement, (5) data analysis and (6) probability. The instructional program of this course addresses both the understanding and use of the concepts in appropriate problem solving situations.

      Algebra I:
      Algebra I provides a formal development of the algebraic skills and concepts necessary for students to succeed in advanced sources. In particular, the instructional program in this course provides for the use of algebraic skills in a wide range of problem-solving situations. The concept of function is emphasized throughout the course. Topics include: (1) operations with real numbers, (2) linear equations and inequalities, (3) relations and functions, (4) polynomials, (5) algebraic functions, and (6) nonlinear equations.

      Algebra II:
      Algebra 2 is a course that extends the content of Algebra 1 and provides further development of concept of a function. Topics include: (1) relations, functions equations and inequalities; (2) conic sections; (3) polynomials; (4) algebraic fractions; (5) logarithmic and exponential functions; (6) sequences and series; (7) counting principles and probability.

      *Typos are probably mine. The PDF is a scanned printout and not OCR and I'm not going to double check everything.

    15. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by vlm · · Score: 1

      OK interesting. Looks like Alg2 gets the debris. Back when alg I and alg II were just one class, 2.2 conic was done in trig class, no idea what 2.6 is or when we covered it, 2.7 was definitely pre-algebra... And I think 2.5 may have been mushed into or next to the trigonometric identities section in trig class.

      I always kind of thought math education was about as permanent and unchanging as euclid's elements but apparently stuff gets shuffled around a lot.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    16. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by mmontour · · Score: 1

      We were offered four classes, to be taken in strict order, Geometry, Algebra, Pre-calculus (I guess the word "trigonometry" doesn't fit in a CHAR(16) column or something stupid like that), Calculus.

      That reminded me of "A Mathematician's Lament" (PDF) by Paul Lockhart.

    17. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

      It also depends if they're on the "Core 4"/Block scheduling or not. Each class was only a semester long. "Mid-Terms" were at the quarter. Classes were 90 minutes long and you had 4 a day. Short classes shuffled at the quarter.

      Where as even a neighboring school "Algebra" would be an entire year long of 45 minute classes with 8 classes per day. Home Ec, Art, and other "short" classes changed at the semester.

      One BIG thing I noticed was I was I transfered in at winter break. I had been taking geometry and was just thrown in with the geometry class. However where I transfered from and where I transfered to had Algebra II/Geometry swapped. So I was expected to know how to solve systems of equations where as I hadn't had that yet.

      The concepts probably don't change. But how you group them does. Reading through all of those descriptions I use most of them daily. Some of those subjects I probably know better than English.

      6 years of Mechanical Engineering (Specializing in controls) and I'm to the point where Laplace transforms/S-domain are almost the same way

    18. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it's the stuff that sets you up for calc. Trig and some other stuff, I think i vaguely remember conics too. Frankly i never quite got how this could possibly have been not required. Just taking 1 math course a year, how much is there to do after basic algebra and geometry? I remember taking calc bc (Basically calc I and II in college) during my senior year. And this was just taking 1 class a year, and not really pushing all that hard. Truly the state of the american education system is sad.

    19. Re:It would be nice if the summary... by Imrik · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I didn't make that very clear, rather unclear actually, I meant:

      If I remember correctly it was algebra for things more complicated than linear equations. For example powers, roots, etc.

  14. ALL these should be required by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Calculus is the foundation of SO many different things. Almost every discipline from medicine to engineering to economics requires a foundation in calculus to understand. Not only that but very many things about how the world works even outside career paths can only be understood with calculus.

    Basic calculus, basic physics, basic chemistry, basic biology. Why are not ALL of these things required of any high school graduate? Without an educated population making good decisions, the entire nation goes down hill.

    1. Re:ALL these should be required by ShavedOrangutan · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Calculus is the foundation of SO many different things. Almost every discipline from medicine to engineering to economics requires a foundation in calculus to understand.

      Not every student needs to go into engineering or economics. A couple of my high school buddies went into auto body and they live FAR better than I do as a programmer (not to mention they were buying homes and starting families while I was still starving in college).

      I'm much more concerned that schools are eliminating vocational electives than not requiring algebra II or calc. There is nothing wrong with being an HVAC tech.

      --
      Godaddy is a scam and a ripoff.
  15. Apples and Oranges by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why not just teach Algebra in elementary school while we are learning to add apples and oranges? I think most kids get scared by the dreaded "Algebra" in middle school when really they already have been doing it. I know I was freaked out by all this new math because I didn't understand I was already doing it.

    1. Re:Apples and Oranges by hedwards · · Score: 1

      Actually, there's been a push in recent years to gradually phase it in over a few years. Meaning that elementary school students are more likely to see and use some of it with appropriate terminology than in the past. I remember when I was a kid, they would slip a small amount of it into the curriculum surreptitiously without calling it that, hence the shock later one.

  16. Oh, boy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We get to cut more Art classes now!

  17. Correlation |= Causation by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    As many others have noted correlation is not causation, but I have noted a correlation that those who want to make Algebra II a requirement should pay attention to. I have noticed that as we as a nation have increased the "requirements" for graduation, the education level of our graduates has diminished. Central planning does not work, not even in education.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    1. Re:Correlation |= Causation by hedwards · · Score: 1

      The phrase "correlation is not causation" doesn't apply here. It's pretty well understood what students are missing out on when they don't take that level of math and what knowing it does for people. If we were talking about calculus or differential equations, I'd say that you've got a point, but a surprising amount of life is made harder by an ignorance of high school level math.

    2. Re:Correlation |= Causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh? Calculus *is* high school level maths in some places for the last three years of high school...

  18. For non-Americans... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...how does Algebra II compare with what we have to take? It looks from the syllabus like it's similar to GCSE Maths (some things omitted, some things included like matrices and logs) which we'd sit at 16...so is it really that easy?

    1. Re:For non-Americans... by PCM2 · · Score: 1

      I have not taken a GCSE Maths test, so I can't really speak to what might actually be on that test. But my impression is that second-year Algebra in the U.S. is a little more in-depth than what is required by the GCSE, as the course is generally taught as a precursor to Calculus. This is one reason why it is not required -- if you have no intention to go on to an education that requires the use of calculus, why should you suffer through the precursors to calculus (which also include a full course on Trigonometry)?

      Also, don't sound too smug about the British education system ... apparently you don't actually have to know any maths to pass the GCSE Maths test with flying colors.

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    2. Re:For non-Americans... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a pretty good explanation. My school scheduled "Advanced Algebra" (Algebra II) at 16, Trigonometry at 17 and Calculus at 18, though depending on your level of math preparedness you could be up or down a year or in an honors-level course.

      Anyway, I remember doing matrices and logs in Algebra II, as well as probability (my favorite bit.) I seem to recall part of it dealing with compounding interest over various intervals, but don't remember why. Math isn't my strong suit.

    3. Re:For non-Americans... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In *my* day, in a British school, we were taught some calculus at age 11/12 (prior to taking the common entrance exam). But as far as I can see, the modern GCSE exam is a total joke compared to old 'O' levels from the 60s and 70s (and even these were, by all accounts, far easier than the matriculation papers that preceded them).

  19. That's not the root of the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Come on. It's politics. Everyone can see it except the people who benefit from the current system. They have the kind of deep denial that only those who have built their lives around inequity can obtain.

    The last thing the education establishment really wants is for a HS diploma to be worth something again.

  20. How about we also require Prob & Stat? by inviolet · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Of all of the classes offered in high school, Algebra II is the leading predictor of college and work success, according to research that has launched a growing national movement to require it of graduates."

    Maybe we should require Probability and Statistics, then, since people still think they can reverse cause and effect.

    "Look! Successful people drive expensive cars! Tell your brother to go buy one, that ought to get his business back on its feet in no time!"

    --
    FATMOUSE + YOU = FATMOUSE
    1. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe we should require Probability and Statistics, then, since people still think they can reverse cause and effect.

      "Look! Successful people drive expensive cars! Tell your brother to go buy one, that ought to get his business back on its feet in no time!"

      I think that would be in the realm of Logic, not Probability and Statistics.

    2. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by vlm · · Score: 2

      Logic if it was deductively reasoned, stat if it was based on a correlation coefficient calculation, business-marketing class if it was based on an advertisement.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    3. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "Of all of the classes offered in high school, Algebra II is the leading predictor of college and work success, according to research that has launched a growing national movement to require it of graduates."

      Maybe we should require Probability and Statistics, then, since people still think they can reverse cause and effect.

      "Look! Successful people drive expensive cars! Tell your brother to go buy one, that ought to get his business back on its feet in no time!"

      Actually, for the mainstream student, requiring Probability and Stats, INSTEAD OF the Algebra/Trig/Pre-Calc sequence would be a world of more benefit to, later, their daily adult lives. Being able to digest everything from practical medical advice and summaries of various Science discoveries, in general, to the application(s) of insurance policies, finances, business, understanding the idiocy of (most) forms of gambling, politics/polls and lamestream News paraphrasing is invaluable. If "common people" were actually are taught to imagine and evaluate risk vs. reward, even just fundamentally, it would arguable reduce the plethora of lack of judgement that Sheeple demonstrate today, at least once they reach young-middle Adulthood.

      Having them learn how to solve a polynomial, instead of possessing the tools to evaluate risks in their lives, is not that helpful and a serious college student who needs Algebra, Trig and later, Calculus, could prep for it in a year or less, anyway.

      It's an outdated Paradigm and the emphasis should be just more practical, for most individuals.

    4. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by timeOday · · Score: 2

      "Look! Successful people drive expensive cars! Tell your brother to go buy one, that ought to get his business back on its feet in no time!"

      And yet even your counter-example has some validity. Any salesperson or real estate agent will tell you that dressing nicely and driving a nice car DOES matter.

      There are no easy or guaranteed solutions in education, but I think adding a little more math is likely to be fruitful.

    5. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      If I were going to name 2 math topics that everyone should have to study before graduating high school, it would be statistics, and personal finance.

      If you don't know statistics, you can easily be fooled. For instance, you might think that "$4 trillion over 10 years" is a bigger amount of money than "$400 billion per year" (and actually, it's probably a smaller amount really due to inflation, but we'll ignore that for now). Or you might think that if a poll says 30% oppose a measure, then it necessarily has the support of the majority of the public.

      Similarly, if you don't know personal finance, you're also easily fooled. For instance, you might when signing a loan agreement focus more on the size of the monthly payment than you do on the interest rate, so you won't notice that you're paying tons of interest but never paying down principle. Or you might not realize that a credit card is a loan at a terrible interest rate. etc. etc.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    6. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by Peter+Mork · · Score: 1

      Which is why I think Probability/Stats is more valuable than Calculus. You need the former to understand the newspaper. You need the latter to characterize equations. Guess which one most of us do more frequently.

    7. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by need4mospd · · Score: 2

      Statistics was the only class I took in college that I wished I had taken early in high school. I might have gone to a different college!

    8. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Prob & Stat could be one of those things... perceived as intruding into safety zones of people uncomfortable with anything "hostile" to their ancient answers to some questions. Or at least perceived such by few people using that group.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    9. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Any salesperson or real estate agent will tell you that dressing nicely and driving a nice car DOES matter.

      Based on what?

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    10. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by DriedClexler · · Score: 1

      And yet even your counter-example has some validity. Any salesperson or real estate agent will tell you that dressing nicely and driving a nice car DOES matter.

      Well, more accurately, stupidy causes *both*

      1) people having to go into sales because they're not smart enough for anything else
      2) people buying from a salesman based on how wealthy he appears to be

      Which produces the spurious correlation we see.

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    11. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by maxume · · Score: 1

      For kids at that age I think making it a requirement will result in more kids dropping out of high school than it will anything else. Especially as the kids that want to go to a decent college are already taking it.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    12. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by SydShamino · · Score: 1
      --
      It doesn't hurt to be nice.
    13. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by corbettw · · Score: 0

      Correlation doesn't equal causation, but it does correlate with it. If the people who studied Algebra II in high school tend to have more successful careers than those who didn't, that would seem to be pretty strong evidence that it's an important subject and should be taught.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    14. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My freshman year of college, I took a delightful course called something like "Introduction to Propositional Logic". Freshman level course in philosophy department. I loved that course. It was rather simple, the course didn't rush through lots of material, we took time to slowly learn basic (0-order) logic, and more importantly, how to turn statements said in speech/writing into a symbolic logical argument, and test whether or not the argument was logically valid. We spent a lot of time deconstructing logical arguments from newspaper stories, politicians, etc., and showing the absurdity in their reasoning just below the surface of the fancy words.

      That course gave me two impressions: first, I cannot even begin to describe how many people in this class had genuine difficulty with logic. We're talking completely misunderstanding if-then statements and how to draw conclusions, but after a couple weeks most of them seemed to have it down.

      Second, sort of drawing from the first part, is that this is the fantastic type of course that is where mathematics comes from: forming logical arguments. It can apply to politicians' speeches, but you can also apply it to mathematics and making mathematical deductions. It was a simple course, and I can't see any reason why it would be above the head of a high schooler. It's probably easier than algebra, and yet more fundamental, and I'd certainly feel much better if all high school graduates had a basic idea of logical argument, rather than a vague sense of how to use a quadratic formula.

      I really wish this Logic course was in high school, and mandatory. I think our graduates would benefit, and I think I would have picked up some areas of mathematics a little easier if I had this course first (the proofs in geometry jump to mind; prior exposure to a logical proof probably would have helped immensely).

    15. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Look! Successful people drive expensive cars! Tell your brother to go buy one, that ought to get his business back on its feet in no time!"

      Sad, isn't it? A large part of our modern society still operates at the level of primitive voodoo and sympathetic magic.

    16. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by publiclurker · · Score: 1

      Well, I would imagine it would be rather hard for a real estate agent to show houses to families if they had to rely on a bus pass.

    17. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 2

      Correlation doesn't equal causation, but it does correlate with it. If the people who studied Algebra II in high school tend to have more successful careers than those who didn't, that would seem to be pretty strong evidence that it's an important subject and should be taught.

      It might also be pretty strong evidence that the same traits which make them have a successful carreer later also cause them to more likely take Algebra II, in which case the fact that they took Algebra II would be a quite good indicator (high correlation), but forcing all others to take Algebra II would do nothing to increase their carreer chances.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    18. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by lahvak · · Score: 1

      I believe this is a very good point. Lot of arguments for teaching algebra to everybody are centered about the fact that while you are learning algebra, you learn logical reasoning. That is true if the course is well taught, but you also have to learn a lot of material that many people will never need. And, if it is poorly taught, as it often is, you will learn nothing except couple of memorized formulas that you will forget couple weeks later.

      For those students who do need the material covered in Algebra 2, learning logic before taking algebra 2 would, I believe, be very beneficial. Many students who have serious trouble with algebra have actually trouble with logic and reading. The class as you describe it would help tremendously with both.

      --
      AccountKiller
    19. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the government mandated a course in statistics, we'd just see the any optional stats classes fall prey to the same lowering of expectations that the rest of public school mandatory curriculum enjoys. Nothing holds back development like politically designed education. The DOE and it's predecessors still require that it's schools don't teach students during the summers for a reason that stopped being relevant over 100 fucking years ago: harvest time.

    20. Re:How about we also require Prob & Stat? by sznupi · · Score: 1

      I would imagine it is rather easy, say, in places / lucrative centers of some cities where cars are hardly allowed...

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
  21. Mixing up cause and effect by T.E.D. · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Boy, that's backward thinking. It is because it is optional that it is such a good indicator. Only people who are planning ahead to college, or who actually enjoy math take it. Forcing everyone to take it won't magically make everyone else start planning ahead to college or enjoying math too.

    1. Re:Mixing up cause and effect by tophermeyer · · Score: 2

      ...maybe. The failure of correlation to prove causation does not mean that a causal relationship doesn't exist.

      I think certainly your argument holds water, kinds of people who elect to take more advanced math courses are probably more likely to continue learning math. But it also seems probably (at least plausible) that the kids that receive higher math education are then better equipped to succeed. And these points are not dichotomous, both effects can be happening at once.

      At the very least, this is an opportunity to get schools teaching more math and holding students to a higher standard. The US education system has had very little of that recently.

  22. Predictor Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe it's a predictor of "success" because it's not required. It would seem to me that because it's not currently required, those that take it are willing to educate themselves beyond the bare minimum. Maybe THAT is the predictor of success.

  23. Just algebra? by toastar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Personally I think Calculus 1 should be required as well, I mean are limits that hard?

    1. Re:Just algebra? by hedwards · · Score: 2

      The issue is time, assuming that a student starts Algebra I their freshman year, they'd have to get through Algebra I, II and III before getting to precalc and finally calculus. Meaning that they'd be taking a math course pretty much every semester, assuming they pass in the first place, and if they don't, then there's precious little time to catch up.

      Additionally, when I was in high school there were 20 credits or so to graduate around here, Giving 5 of them over to math isn't going to just happen without crowding something else out.

    2. Re:Just algebra? by Garble+Snarky · · Score: 1

      What the hell is the difference between algebra and "precalculus"?

    3. Re:Just algebra? by JustOK · · Score: 4, Funny

      6, roughly. Ignoring air friction.

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    4. Re:Just algebra? by Xaositecte · · Score: 2

      Calculus just isn't useful to most people graduating high school. Learning the mathematical definition of a limit isn't going to benefit, say, a future baker in any way. why teach it to them?

    5. Re:Just algebra? by Experiment+626 · · Score: 1

      Precalculus courses cover topics from analytic geometry and trigonometry in addition to algebraic ones.

    6. Re:Just algebra? by smelch · · Score: 2

      Algebra III? I took Algebra I in 8th grade, Geometry as a Freshman, Algebra II and Precalc (trig) as a sophomore and Calculus BC (equivalent of I and II at college level + a little of III) as a junior. I don't recall an Algebra III at all. Also, if I can make it through Algebra II as a sophomore crammed in to half the year (but it took up two classes worth of time), I would have to think most people can handle it as seniors. The fact is, most seniors in high school do not take a math class, which is stupid.

      --
      If I can just reach out with my words and touch a butthole, just one, it will all be worth it.
    7. Re:Just algebra? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing, really - "precalculus" is basically intermediate algebra with a focus on functions, matrices, and series.

    8. Re:Just algebra? by the_hellspawn · · Score: 1

      yes they are! hated calculus!

      --
      "The laws of science be a harsh mistress." --Bender
    9. Re:Just algebra? by Hazel+Bergeron · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not all societies have the notion that the purpose of education is to make you a useful cog.

    10. Re:Just algebra? by jbengt · · Score: 1

      I agree, I'm not even sure what Algebra II is supposed to mean. When I was in high school (a long time ago) I had to take a year of Algebra (no I, II, or II) as a Freshman, a year of Geometry as a Sophomore, elected to take College Algebra/Trig as a Junior (which was a semester of each), and stupidly didn't elect to take Calculus as a Senior (and no college credit was available for any of that, AP wasn't a concept in my school then). Which of those would be considered Algebra I, II, or III?

    11. Re:Just algebra? by ZorinLynx · · Score: 1

      Indeed. I didn't take math as a senior, and ended up regretting it when I had to review and relearn some of the things I had forgotten from pre-calculus in junior year. If math had been required in all four years, I would have had an easier time in the long run.

      This is one of those cases where as a student you go "Yay no math!" but don't realize how important it is to keep using your skills so you don't forget them.

      A year is a long time.

    12. Re:Just algebra? by Albert+Schueller · · Score: 2

      My stock response to this is that educators simply don't know what a person will end up doing in life. Hence the goal of educators is to provide a broad spectrum of ideas for the student to draw upon in their future endeavors--whatever they may be. It's certainly true that a student without calculus has fewer options in life than one with calculus. That doesn't mean I think every student should be required to take calculus, just that your argument for not requiring it is not sound.

    13. Re:Just algebra? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting; my high-schooling (grades 9, 10, 11 - no 12 yet, thank (a) god) consisted of two maths (geometry and algebra), two english (composition with grammar and literature), french (and latin in grade 9), history and two sciences (I did chemistry and physics) each year. While there were options (german for french; biology or geography for the sciences, e.g.) two maths and two english were always manditory.

    14. Re:Just algebra? by by+(1706743) · · Score: 2

      Learning the mathematical definition of a limit isn't going to benefit, say, a future baker in any way. why teach it to them?

      You hold a party and invite one friend, with instructions for that person to invite another friend who will eat half as much as your friend. That guest then has instructions to invite another friend who eats half as much, and so forth.

      It takes 1 cup of flour to make a loaf of bread for your friend, and thus, 1/2 cup of flour to make a loaf of bread for your friend's friend, 1/4 for your friend's friend's friend, etc. Assuming infinitely many people show up at your party (and you do not consume any bread), how many cups of flour are required to bake bread for the crowd?

      Hah, and you said it wasn't useful!

    15. Re:Just algebra? by Sosetta · · Score: 1

      Algebra II == College Algebra, depending on how dumbed-down the college algebra course is. If you're taking it in high school, and it doesn't involve group theory, then it's Algebra II.

    16. Re:Just algebra? by Xaositecte · · Score: 1

      That's a strong argument in favor of math up through Algebra, English up through being able to write a basic research paper, History up through having a basic overview of the past 2000 years, etc. I'm not arguing to take it out of high school entirely, just that it shouldn't be required.

      Calculus is, IMHO, just past the line between "good for everyone" and "only good for people specializing in math-related subjects."

    17. Re:Just algebra? by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 2

      With respect, there shouldn't be a semester that doesn't include at least one math course. The pace and rigor of primary education is terribly lacking and this more than anything is to blame for underachievement, not intellectual capacity. Americans simply do not value education and the fact that we're even having this conversation reflect it.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    18. Re:Just algebra? by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Dude, I've never passed Calculus, and even I know that 1+ 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/8 + ... sums to an infinitesimal amount less than 2. It's 2-(1/inf), or however you'd say that in Calculus terms.

      If someone needs calculus to figure it out, they aren't paying attention. (Also, that problem is totally absurd for a real world baking problem.)

      And while I've been a programmer for more than a decade, I've never even used Trig in my job. In fact, I've forgotten how to do it, if I needed to figure out the angles of a triangle, I'd have to look it up.

      I think requiring Algebra II is probably reasonable, though. I don't remember exactly what that was, but I'm sure I use it.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    19. Re:Just algebra? by pspahn · · Score: 1

      ...the goal of educators is to provide a broad spectrum of ideas for the student to draw upon in their future endeavors--whatever they may be.

      You've just argued yourself out of the argument.

      If students should be offered a broad range of subjects, then why would we force them to take another math class that will likely become forgotten and useless within five years?

      Schools have already taken away many choices in arts and athletics due to budget cuts. The last thing students need is more of something they are not interested in. Nothing about Algebra II is going to provide more breadth to a student's experience that Algebra I didn't already provide.

      --
      Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.
    20. Re:Just algebra? by datavirtue · · Score: 2

      I'm sick of hearing "such and such isn't going to benefit from learning...X" Having never learned something, you are ignorant of what you don't know, not to mention your plain ignorance. Full blown math and science should be required for everyone. If not, you end up supporting them! Learning about everything possibly opens new horizons for people and allows them to make an educated decision about what they want to do with themselves. Not being particularly interested in Psychology, I'm glad I took the classes and learned about what I didn't know. It is now more interesting to me, and I understand a swath of paradigms I didn't even know were quantified. This knowledge now helps me make better decisions about everything.

      --
      I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
    21. Re:Just algebra? by Oxford_Comma_Lover · · Score: 1

      You don't reallly need precalc to do calc, but it may make it a tiny bit easier at the beginning. At my school, it was relatively challenging for the age group, so I assume it weeded some people out. (Probably harder than calculus, as it was taught a little more rigorously and you didn't have to worry as much about people not intuitively grasping it). It was mostly learning formulas for lots of different functions -- how do you do at coordinates x, length l, and width w, things like that. Plus a few unusual concepts like synthetic division of polynomials, etc...

      --
      -- IANAL, this isn't legal advice, and definitely isn't legal advice for you. Also, Squee!
    22. Re:Just algebra? by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      Pre-calculus is a stepping stone between Algebra and Calculus wherein concepts introduced in Algebra, and used in Calculus are taught again with more rigor. For those a bit slower on the "uptake" it helps strengthen their Algebra skills so they don't have to struggle quite so hard with the same while fighting the new battles of Calculus. Some people need it, others don't.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    23. Re:Just algebra? by lorenlal · · Score: 1

      Depends... According to Intelligent Limits, if the baker fits a particular baking class, and the composition of the people arriving satisfy the belief hypothesis, you may only need to show up with one loaf.

    24. Re:Just algebra? by MacGyver2210 · · Score: 1

      I think requiring this will subject students (much as I was) that are completely disinterested with higher math to things they care nothing about, and will probably make their lives harder.

      I took Algebra ! and Algebra II in high school, but I hated both of them. I wasn't using the math for anything at the moment, and I could see no point in it. When I went off to college to become a computer programmer, I had to spend a month teaching myself all of that crap I cared nothing about all over again, since I didn't care enough to retain it the first time.

      I think the solution should be to let students choose their own course of study, course of inquiry if you will, of the world around them. Had I been able to choose to take programming classes first, I'm sure I would have known that I needed said math, and would have actually cared about the numbers I filled in - instead of just doing it because I HAVE to.

      --
      If the only way you can accept an assertion is by faith, then you are conceding that it can't be taken on its own merits
    25. Re:Just algebra? by Paul+Jakma · · Score: 1

      So you've never done any serious graphics or physical simulation programming then?

      --
      I use Friend/Foe + mod-point modifiers as a karma/reputation system.
    26. Re:Just algebra? by Xaositecte · · Score: 1

      Hi, I'm in my third year of an EE curriculum, and know plenty of math. It's useful for me, and will continue to be in my chosen profession.

      I still don't think calculus should be a required topic in high school. Optional? Yes. Required? No.

      There's an opportunity cost to every requirement, it takes away from time that could be spent on other subjects. Hell, math courses take a disproportionately large amount of time compared to others - the term I took calc 1, the homework and studying for that single class took more of my time than every other class I was taking combined! This is from someone who enjoys math and is good at it! I can't imagine it would be like for student to just wants to be an artist or something.

    27. Re:Just algebra? by cowdung · · Score: 1

      Huh? In most of South America Calculus 1 is required!

      Wow.. US high school education is really in a sad state if most UNDERDEVELOPED countries have higher standards!

      (However, I think US universities are the best of the world)

    28. Re:Just algebra? by Saija · · Score: 1

      I was required to learn calculus 1 & calculus 2, and guess what? i don't have used that thing since college, nor linear algebra, not even physics.

      --
      Slashdot ya no es que lo era! ;)
    29. Re:Just algebra? by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Uh, no.

      Just like 99.9999% of programmers out there, who work on server processes or web site backends or business applications or commercial development haven't.

      No one, I mean no one, builds fucking physics simulations. There are like ten of those in all of existence at various video game companies, and that's it. Maybe 200 programmers work on the physics part of those in the entire world. That's it.

      That's always the go-to response for 'Calculus is pointless for CS majors', but it's utter nonsense.

      By your logic, programmers need a car on auto repair, because I promise you that more programmers, worldwide, are working on the embedded computers inside cars than on physics simulators.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    30. Re:Just algebra? by xTantrum · · Score: 1

      Mostly Trig. but a few other concepts with geometry on the cartesian plane.

      --
      $action = empty(PHP) ? backToC() : unset(PHP) ; "when the concrete cases are understood, the abstractions are readily
    31. Re:Just algebra? by xTantrum · · Score: 1

      when you're done algebra 1 you should be able to solve complex quadratic equations. When you're finished algebra 2, you should be able to use synthetic division and a few other techniques to solve polynomials higher than a quadratic. You'll also have learned functions and operation on functions, including logarithmic and exponential functions. Then you should have a firm grasp of complex numbers, operating on them and using them to solve equations of various degrees. distance, midpoint and circle formula should be covered in algebra 2 as well and you should be very comfortable with working on the cartesian plane, analyzing graphs and their properties and applying them to real world situations. for me algebra 2 is basically functions of any degree and their operations you should know these like the back of your hand. Then you move on to Trig, and then Calculus.

      --
      $action = empty(PHP) ? backToC() : unset(PHP) ; "when the concrete cases are understood, the abstractions are readily
    32. Re:Just algebra? by couchslug · · Score: 1

      If you have initiative, you will seek out learning. If you don't have initiative, grab a broom.

      Save the resources for the gifted instead of wasting them on window-lickers.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    33. Re:Just algebra? by Rasperin · · Score: 1

      I think you have far too many steps, they would need alg 1 and 2 and trig, which 2 and trig could be spread over the same year. So yeah, instead of not having to take math your senior level of high school, you have to take calc 1.

      --
      WTF Slashdot, why do I have to login 50 times to post?
    34. Re:Just algebra? by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

      Not all societies have the notion that the purpose of education is to make you a useful cog.

      Would you accept the purpose being to make you a literate human being capable of understanding the world around you?

      "I never used math after highschool." And a sea slug never uses language. Should we assume from that that language is useless?

      Mathematics is the language used to model reality, particularly statistics and probability. If you don't know math, you simply lack the mental concepts required to understand any non deterministic process or aggregate. You're limited to "pointy stick *good*", or "mmmmmmm, pi".

    35. Re:Just algebra? by Physics+Dude · · Score: 1

      No one, I mean no one, builds ... physics simulations.

      C'mon, I can't be the only one here who programs physics simulations for fun. ...and they're not for games! ;-)

    36. Re:Just algebra? by Hazel+Bergeron · · Score: 1

      Anyone who talks in terms of some identified "gifted" being deserving of resources vs "wasting them on window-lickers" qualifies as a "window-licker". It's fortunate that I don't subscribe to the same quasi-fascist notion of humanity's collective purpose that you do, otherwise I'd have to condemn you as a beta or worse, couch slug.

    37. Re:Just algebra? by k8to · · Score: 1

      Totally wrong.

      I skipped math entirely my last year in high school and learned far more by spending time in other areas. My 3rd year math class (BC Calc and other stuff) was mostly a waste of time, I have never used this information in my life ever.

      I program computational systems for a living.

      --
      -josh
  24. By this time their fate is already decided. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously, by the time you are taking Algebra II in high school your fate is pretty much decided. You don't take Algebra II and magically become a problem solver, coloration is not causation.

    In my highschool, you could choose to take Algebra II, and then Calculus. Or you could take "Life Skills Math" instead and learn how to compute tips and tax on groceries. My point being that the people who are the future successful college students and workers are choosing to take Algebra II because they want to learn or they know it will be invaluable to their education. On the other hand, the people opting out probably have the attitude "why should I do more work if I don't have to" and that usually means they wont be successful students and workers.

    1. Re:By this time their fate is already decided. by cowdung · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily.. I was always bad at math.. but in 11th grade I had a good teacher. I even placed 4th in a national math contest that year. It doesn't take long to learn.. all you have to do is purge all the bad teaching you got before. :)

  25. As a Software Architect, I say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    That requiring Algebra II would've prevented me from graduating High School. At that point in my life I didn't know that software is what I wanted to do, and Algebra II was just too abstract for me to spend the effort on learning it. Once I had a way to apply Algebra - it was much easier.

  26. It's already an elective forcing it would only by Bruha · · Score: 1

    Cause students who are not smart enough to do this to fail or get a bad grade lowering their GPA and making it more difficult for them to get into a good college.

    1. Re:It's already an elective forcing it would only by icebraining · · Score: 1

      Unless there's something I'm missing (I'm not from the US), someone who wants to go to college should know Algebra II to get into a good college. You don't have to be that smart, even an average student should be able to get a decent grade if they study.

    2. Re:It's already an elective forcing it would only by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If they lack the necessary intellectual prowess why "should" they be allowed into college? College used to be about actually learning something, not putting up with incompetents that slow the pace of learning and erode academic standards. College should be more than a piece of paper that permits a job interview. It shouldn't be necessary to waste time and money on an advanced degree simply because dumb asses were permitted entrance and allowed to waste everyone elses time as an undergrad. We have trade schools for a reason.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
  27. E=MC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why do we have to do E=MC again if we have already done it ?

    1. Re:E=MC by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      Why do we have to do E=MC again if we have already done it ?
      Because you did it wrong.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
  28. Algebra II is a predictor of performance... by hydrodog · · Score: 1

    Leading economists to conclude that the US is !@*ed

  29. lagging in the percentage of younger workers.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'lagging in the percentage of younger workers with college degrees...'

    Why do we need so many people with college degrees?

  30. Require more than Alg. 2.... by madhatter256 · · Score: 2

    Schools that just haven't required Algebra 2 are the working-class providers of America. Schools that do require it already seem to be producing students that do succeed better in college and beyond.

    I took Algebra 2 in 10th grade and then Precalculus in 11th grade, and then Calculus in 12th grade. I went on to college and graduated with a degree in civil engineering. I have a friend who took Algebra 2 in 12th grade. He went to Devry and.... well, let's just say he wished he worked harder back in high school.

    I think at the very least, pre-calculus should be required by the 12th grade.

    --
    Previewing comments are for sissies!
    1. Re:Require more than Alg. 2.... by kehren77 · · Score: 2

      Let's not limit this to Math either. Most schools should be requiring more credits of Math, Science and English Language/Literature. We needed 4 credits of English to graduate from my high school, but only 2 Math, 2 Science, 3 Social Studies and 1.5 Phy Ed credits. Each year long class was a credit and you needed 23 credits total to graduate. 7 periods in a day. That leaves way too many elective courses for students.

      I think students should be taking at least 3 years of Math and 3 years of Science. And given the obesity rates in America, perhaps 4 years of Phy Ed.

    2. Re:Require more than Alg. 2.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      +1

      Over a decade ago, I took Algebra 2 in 9th grade and passed it with a B. In the 1950s, Russians were learning Calculus in 6th grade while US students were learning that "brushing your teeth is a good idea." Our primary schools are crap, "No Child Left Behind," as I understand, dumbs everything down for the smart ones and ensures that nobody has an opportunity to achieve their potential. I propose that we have a standardized exit exam. Once you pass, you can, but are not required to, attend at a university or trade school. For those that want to stay, they can take more advanced classes or go for a wider breadth of knowledge (music, art, history, drafting, electronics, auto shop, etc). For those that want to skip classes, they might consider taking the exit test and moving on with their life since they already think it's a waste of their time. On top of that, early exits reduce education costs and the savings can be given to the teachers that actually perform. $40k/year is not going to keep someone that could be making $90k/year otherwise.

      Pre-Calculus as a requirement should be interchangeable with statistics. Statistics are far more likely to be used in business and industry. Calculus may be used if you're working with fluid dynamics or architecture, not for the average Joe. Even physics can be done with algebra and experimentation.

      If we really want to teach science and engineering, it's time to throw out the curriculum and start building stuff in class using the books as what they were meant for - reference.

    3. Re:Require more than Alg. 2.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your phys ed argument sums it up, The fat/lazy kids I remember all through school pretty much dicked off and sat out everything in phys ed. It was my favorite class and I dicked off in all of my courses except English and history. Science was alright. I hated math/algebra and I did miserable in those classes.

      The funny thing is I do a lot of game programming and I've figured out any algebra related problem that I've come across, I find it fun when it actually applies to something I'm trying to create. Trying to force people(kids) to do something they despise in school never really seems to benefit anyone. I still hate my algebra teacher 12 years after school. She was real fat, mean, and bitchy.

    4. Re:Require more than Alg. 2.... by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      What is pre-calculus?

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  31. No requirement will suffice... by Lead+Butthead · · Score: 3, Insightful

    if all the schools do is rubber stamp the grades. Having worked as a tutor in college math lab when I was a piss poor student, there were people seeking help in the lab that can't handle basic fraction arithmetic.

    --
    ELOI, ELOI, LAMA SABACHTHANI!?
    1. Re:No requirement will suffice... by jasenj1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      My wife substitute teaches at a local elementary school and this is my "cool story bro'" anecdotal evidence.

      Schools CAN NOT fail students who are performing poorly. Failing an unruly, constant behavioral problem student, who refuses to do work and whose parents refuse to take any action at home, will only make the school's No Child Left Behind score go down and hurt their $$$. So the schools push these troublemakers on up the line.

      "Specialists" do everything except fill in the bubble on the standardized tests to ensure that EVERY student passes. It is not about ensuring kids have learned what they're supposed to, or that they can perform at grade appropriate levels, it's all about making sure they PASS.

      We're planning on switching over to home schooling next year or possibly the year after - or move to a different district. The local public school system is a sad, cruel joke.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bx4pN-aiofw

  32. Them's some low standards of difficulty. by icannotthinkofaname · · Score: 1

    Algebra II, and its complexities

    What complexities?

    --
    Let q be a radix > 1. I am in ur base-q, killing 10 d00ds.
    1. Re:Them's some low standards of difficulty. by claus.wilke · · Score: 1

      Apparently Algebra II includes complex numbers. Are you saying complex numbers are not complex?

    2. Re:Them's some low standards of difficulty. by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 1

      The perceived complexity is imaginary.

    3. Re:Them's some low standards of difficulty. by RightwingNutjob · · Score: 2

      No, no. Some of it's real.

  33. yes we need more degrees by Osgeld · · Score: 1

    soon enough you wont even be able to deliver pizza without at least 2 years of debt

    1. Re:yes we need more degrees by hydrodog · · Score: 1

      If John can deliver x pizzas in a week, Jimmy can deliver 2x pizzas, and Marge can deliver 3x+1 pizzas, while John's pay is p, Jimmy's pay = pkx^2while Marge's gets 8*px^1.2, how long before all three jobs are outsourced to China?

    2. Re:yes we need more degrees by swanzilla · · Score: 1

      I can say with 100% certainty that U.S. pizza delivery cannot be outsourced, by definition. Next.

    3. Re:yes we need more degrees by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Then you should be happier with increasing high school graduation requirements. If you can't do algebra then you really shouldn't be getting into university and should be considering something else instead - like a trade school that doesn't require a high school diploma for admission.

    4. Re:yes we need more degrees by icebraining · · Score: 1

      The question is: how much do you need to pre-heat the pizzas for them to arrive warm after traveling from China to the US?

    5. Re:yes we need more degrees by Mindcontrolled · · Score: 1

      Well, of course you first assume a spherical pizza in a vaccuum isotropically emitting radiation. The rest is simple and left as an exercise for the reader.

      --
      Ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.
  34. Misleading Statements by eepok · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Algebra II is the leading predictor of college and work success"

    This is not precisely true. The most accurate statement is "The taking (and passing) of math levels beyond Algebra I (and maybe Geometry) is the leading predictor of college and work success." There's nothing about Algebra II as a subject that would innately give humans an edge in college or life success. It's going above and beyond the minimum requirements that's good for the student.

    Moreover, a student going above and beyond the minimum may be more than a sign of innate mathematical competence. It may be a symptom of certain school, peer, or family pressures-- all of which combine in the "culture of education" which is a fantastic predictor of being accepted into 4-year institutions of higher education.

    1. Re:Misleading Statements by Animats · · Score: 1

      The most accurate statement is "The taking (and passing) of math levels beyond Algebra I (and maybe Geometry) is the leading predictor of college and work success."

      Right. Passing Algebra II is a good predictor and filter. Whether pushing more people to get the skill set Algebra II provides is an open question.

    2. Re:Misleading Statements by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It may be a useful bright line test for those that should pursue career training outside of the college path. Here in the US we are short handed on skilled trades men and women. University isn't the best choice for everyone, and we should be focusing our educational system only on those appropriately college bound.

      Hammering everyone into the college mold makes no more sense than hammering in screws.

    3. Re:Misleading Statements by eepok · · Score: 1

      Indeed! There are many mathematically-inclined career routes that require very strong understandings of subjects up through trigonometry but *don't* necessarily require college degrees. (Whether it's entirely realistic that these careers can be easily obtained without the Bachelor's Degree stamp of approval is another subject.)

  35. Above All Else by sycodon · · Score: 2

    Teach it in context of its potential applications. Without this, it's no different than diagraming sentences all day.

    Sure, you'll know all about sentence structure, but you won't be able to write worth a damn.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    1. Re:Above All Else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm seriously interested in this idea. It's not that I don't agree with it but I'd wonder what application we could teach your average 16-17 year old in the usage of the quadratic equation?

    2. Re:Above All Else by ackthpt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm seriously interested in this idea. It's not that I don't agree with it but I'd wonder what application we could teach your average 16-17 year old in the usage of the quadratic equation?

      Real world is filled with examples where you could apply Algebra to learn or estimate things. Most people react, rather than plan, but assume you make $20/hr, work 20 miles from home, gas is $4/gallon, house payment is $500/mo., etc. You could run kids through learning how much disposable income they'll have depending upon changes in any of the variables.

      I had a government teacher, who was a lawyer, consider events in the days news in light of constitutional law, whether it was a States Rights or Federal item, etc. The news is full of things you can use to construct mathematical models from and have the student see what effects there are on the outcome when values change. I found Algebra and Trigonometry were a lot more interesting when I was trying to work out problems I could see a purpose behind, rather than the stock story problems in text books.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    3. Re:Above All Else by sycodon · · Score: 1

      The quadratic equation is an exellent example of diagraming the sentence. In and of itself, it doesn't have an obvious use. But as ackthpt points out, it is part of a process that is useful.

      So this approach would be something like this:

      In the real world you have to plan your financial arrangements. When you graduate and get a job you will need to figure out how much you afford to pay for housing and gas and how far away you can live. Here is how to do it...

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    4. Re:Above All Else by nido · · Score: 1

      just modded you off-topic, when I meant to give a +1. Whoops - sorry about that. :)

      . I found Algebra and Trigonometry were a lot more interesting when I was trying to work out problems I could see a purpose behind, rather than the stock story problems in text books.

      John Taylor Gatto has essays about this phenomenon. The Seven Lesson School Teacher has this passage:

      A lady named Kathy wrote this to me from Dubois, Indiana the other
      day:

                  "What big ideas are important to little kids? Well, the biggest
      idea I think they need is that what they are learning isn't
      idiosyncratic -- that this is some system to it all and it's not just
      raining down on them as they helplessly absorb. That's the task, to
      understand, to make coherent."

                  Kathy has it wrong. The first lesson I teach is confusion.
      Everything I teach is out of context... I teach the unrelating of
      everything. I teach disconnections.
      I teach too much: the orbiting of
      planets, the law of large numbers, slavery, adjectives, architectural
      drawing, dance, gymnasium, choral singing, assemblies, surprise guests,
      fire drills, computer languages, parent's nights, staff-development
      days, pull-out programs, guidance with strangers you may never see
      again, standardized tests, age-segregation unlike anything seen in the
      outside world... what do any of these things have to do with each
      other?

                  Even in the best schools a close examination of curriculum and its
      sequences turns up a lack of coherence, full of internal contradictions.
      Fortunately the children have no words to define the panic and anger
      they feel at constant violations of natural order and sequence fobbed
      off on them as quality in education. The logic of the school-mind is
      that it is better to leave school with a tool kit of superficial jargon
      derived from economics, sociology, natural science and so on than to
      leave with one genuine enthusiasm. But quality in education entails
      learning about something in depth. Confusion is thrust upon kids by too
      many strange adults, each working alone with only the thinnest
      relationship with each other, pretending for the most part, to an
      expertise they do not possess.

                  Meaning, not disconnected facts, is what sane human beings seek,
      and education is a set of codes for processing raw facts into meaning.
      Behind the patchwork quilt of school sequences, and the school obsession
      with facts and theories the age-old human search lies well concealed.
      This is harder to see in elementary school where the hierarchy of school
      experience seems to make better sense because the good-natured simple
      relationship of "let's do this" and "let's do that now" is just assumed
      to mean something and the clientele has not yet consciously discerned
      how little substance is behind the play and pretense.

      --
      Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly.
      www.teslabox.com
    5. Re:Above All Else by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 2

      Math education was terrible when I was in school. I am a practical person: without real world problems, I can't get a real handle on anything. When I took Calculus I hated derivatives...It was never explained what they were *for*...It just seemed like masturbation. The next semester I took physics and the prof made some offhanded remark about the equations of motion, and the whole thing became perfectly fucking clear! I had goddamn twitching foaming epiphany right in the middle of fucking class! I wanted to take my heavy ass book and beat the shit out of my calc prof!

      The whole idea that math should be taught as if it is completely divorced from the physical world is why everyone hates math.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    6. Re:Above All Else by PRMan · · Score: 1

      And yet, most people say they hate those darn word problems...

      --
      Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
    7. Re:Above All Else by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      I hated them. But I hated them only because I was required to write a complete sentence as answer.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    8. Re:Above All Else by lahvak · · Score: 1

      The problem with that is not everybody is the same. Students who find challenging abstract problems more interesting than practical problems will find that kind of problems boring, and will grow up hating math. The main problem with that is, this is exactly that type of students who should actually major in math.

      You are right, though, that most "stock story problems" in math textbooks are horrible, as they are actually uninteresting for both types of students. They pretend to be applied problems, which will drive away the more abstract minded, but they are actually artificial, which will be quickly recognized by more practical oriented students. The result is catastrophic: more abstract minded students are either driven away from math altogether, or get the (mistaken) impression that while math is cool, its applications are boring and demented, while more practical minded students will come to the conclusion that math is simply boring and useless.

      --
      AccountKiller
    9. Re:Above All Else by ejasons · · Score: 1

      Math education was terrible when I was in school. I am a practical person: without real world problems, I can't get a real handle on anything. When I took Calculus I hated derivatives...It was never explained what they were *for*...It just seemed like masturbation. The next semester I took physics and the prof made some offhanded remark about the equations of motion, and the whole thing became perfectly fucking clear! I had goddamn twitching foaming epiphany right in the middle of fucking class! I wanted to take my heavy ass book and beat the shit out of my calc prof!

      Being able to learn something that is abstract is also a skill...

    10. Re:Above All Else by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      Suck. My. Cock.

      Pretentious fucking math weenies OOOooo look, nothing we do has a practical application, look how fucking special we are! NEWSFLASH ASSHOLE, NOBODY GIVES A SHIT. 99% of the world *doesn't* learn that way, and forcing the whole education system to fit that crappy mold is why no one can fucking do math. They don't know what it's FOR.

      But of *course* it's not because you're fuckups who can't come up with a decent curriculum. It's because everyone else is stupid. Way to solve the goddamn problem. Oh wait, it's a *practical* problem. Are there any physicists in the house? Chemists? Anyone who uses math for something besides masturbation?

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  36. Say what? by Happy+Nuclear+Death · · Score: 1

    I took not only Algebra II, but AP Calculus (AB) in high school. I never thought it made me all that special.

    You're going to be in for a world of hurt if you hit college without Algebra II, if you want to do anything even vaguely technical.

  37. In that case..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...we need to change the teachers, too. My Algebra II teacher was so bad I didn't take another Math class for 15 years. Starting from that point, going forward, I am a straight student who received Cs in Algebra II.

    Somewhere there's a disconnect. And it spread to infect everything.

    1. Re:In that case..... by kevinNCSU · · Score: 1

      My Algebra II teacher was so bad I didn't take another Math class for 15 years. Starting from that point, going forward, I am a straight student who received Cs in Algebra II. Somewhere there's a disconnect. And it spread to infect everything.

      It's rare that a careless error in writing can mess you up as badly as one in algebra will, but I'd say that's a golden example if I've ever seen one =)

  38. This is Assinine by Agamous+Child · · Score: 1

    But not because it "should" be required already, or that the study doesn't correlate.

    It's stupid because this is just another way for politicians and businessmen to attach a fix to public education without actually having to do anything.

    Let's get rid of Phys Ed (Budget Cuts), Music (Budget Cuts), Art (Budget Cuts), Any language but Spanish (Budget Cuts) But oh hell let's put them all in Algebra 2, then they'll be smart and productive!!!

    Some kids are going to college (I don't count 2 year degrees or online schools here) and they need Alg.2, some kids are not, they don't need it. 90% of the population doesn't even do arithmetic every day in their regular jobs, they don't need Alg.2.

    All you guys spouting how you took it, and "wow you didn't know that it wasn't required," well let's just say that you were oblivious to all the "regular" ed kids who took Consumer Math. I was in the higher math classes too, but that didn't mean that everyone took them.

    --
    I had a sig, but /. ate it. My Web Site
  39. causality and side-effects by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

    As they say in the study, it's quite possible motivated kids take Algebra II and that's why they do well in life. One of the study authors says the causal relationship is "very very weak." Meanwhile, requiring that everyone take this to graduate means more kids drop out, and then try to go into the workforce with no degree at all.

    It'd be really great if we were all Philosopher-Kings that understood everything, but one-size-fits-all education is the sort of utopian idea that has difficulty translating to real life.

    --
    Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
  40. Obligatory xkcd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://xkcd.com/552/

  41. We can salvage this research! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obviously it's stupid to fix our high school curriculum.

    But this research has pointed to a clear curriculum fix we *can* make:

    We need to require competency in elementary logic and statistics for anyone involved in producing high school curricula.

  42. That is thoroughly stupid by Weaselmancer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ok, let's look at this. First part of the quote:

    Algebra II is the leading predictor of college and work success

    Ok, that makes sense. Second part of the quote:

    according to research that has launched a growing national movement to require it of graduates.

    That is idiotic. The reason why Algebra II is a predictor of success is because it is one of the classes you opt-in and take if you're going to college. Only people with career plans in high school take Algebra II - of course it's a predictor of success. And conversely, if you make it mandatory it won't be an indicator anymore.

    Reminds me of the joke about the guy who heard that most accidents happen within ten miles of his home, so he moved.

    --
    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.
    1. Re:That is thoroughly stupid by ChinggisK · · Score: 1

      Only people with career plans in high school take Algebra II - of course it's a predictor of success.

      That's it! We'll make career plans a high school requirement!

    2. Re:That is thoroughly stupid by the_humeister · · Score: 2

      I like the one about the guy who brings his own bomb on a plane because while having one bomb on a plane is rare, having two bombs on a plane is even more rare.

    3. Re:That is thoroughly stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... or that most people die in their beds, so I'm just going to sleep in a coffee shop. You know, pull down my hat and doze off.

      (From Get Shorty)

    4. Re:That is thoroughly stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reminds me of the joke about the guy who heard that most accidents happen within ten miles of his home, so he moved.

      LOL! Funniest. Joke. Evar.

    5. Re:That is thoroughly stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TFA says that "Algebra II is the leading predictor of college and work success." The noun here is "success", not "college". There is no argument that Algebra II causes students to attend college. Instead, it predicts two kinds of success, "in college" & "at work." If students understand math up to, but not including Algebra II, then they have a useful background to succeed.

    6. Re:That is thoroughly stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, the whole article tells me the real focus for education should be on critical thinking, not Algebra II.

  43. How about Math and Science for BA degrees? by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 2

    At least Stats or Calculus 2xx and Biology, Chem or Geology for Liberal Arts.

    More for people getting a teaching certificate, even if you are going to teach English or Arts, have some background knowledge.

  44. Most important Subject? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So let me get this straight. We want to require Algebra II, but most students who "pass" lower math levels can't handle actually working with it (just look at the cashier at the local convenience store). We graduate students who are functionally illiterate and ignorant of history, government, and many scientific subjects. So even if we do require it, that does not necessitate mastery.

  45. It could be a filter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Think of Algebra 2 as a filter that removes the lazy and the stupid from the graduating stream.

  46. Question (been a while) by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

    Where does Algebra II start up? It's been 20+ years since high school, so I forget the line between Alg I & Alg II.
    Also, nothing wrong with a little edumication! [yes, that was on porpoise]

    --
    Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
  47. I'm against it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Given that a diploma from an American high school is essentially the minimal requirement for any job or training short of flipping burgers, requiring Algebra II is too much. There are simply too many jobs that can be done without it, that shouldn't be denied to people who suck at math.

    Algebra II is already a requirement for admission to most four-year universities. That's as it should be. High school in the USA is not solely for those on the college-preparatory track.

    Now, you could argue that maybe high school *should* be college preparation and everyone not planning on going to college should be enrolled in a trade school. But since these trade-schools-in-lieu-of-high-schools don't exist in the USA, we shouldn't be denying high school diplomas to people just because they aren't college material.

  48. Maybe I'm stupid or something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know algebra and use it all the time in my work, but what exactly is in "Algebra II"? A sentence in the summary would have been nice.

    Hmmm ... what I've learned from the article is that it includes "intricate mysteries of quadratics, logarithms and imaginary numbers". The graphic with some actual math helps more to explain what it is, although I doubt multiple-choice really demonstrates what it takes to have proficiency in the subject. The article itself isn't particularly informative either, although this statement probably sums it up:

    "“Ass-um-topes,” he said, intentionally stumbling over the word “asymptotes,” which they have been studying. “I have no idea what those are.”"

    Ah, now I get it. It's like magnets, and "math is hard".

    While I'm all for improving math skills, I'm thinking maybe people also need to learn more about correlation and causation, critical thinking, and how to write better, especially journalists.

  49. CAUSAL ARROW BACKWARDS by Major+Variola+(ret) · · Score: 0

    Smart people take Alg II. Smart people do well. Read _The Bell Curve_

  50. So what about Calculus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Calculus has been optional in most High Schools for how many years? Man this shit is really getting out of whack. I love it how we now send people to college so they can answer phones in customer service jobs... I mean really? Is this what our society has devolved to? One hand security theater, on the other education theater. Got your Right and your Left covered respectively.

    Most people are stupid, no amount of school will fix that. Yes stupid people need jobs, sending them to school for extra X amount of years only pushes the need of them getting a job down the line, it does not make that need evaporate. Yeah you can claim your unemployment numbers are dropping since people are going back to school instead of looking for work, but that will only keep your facade going for so long. Only one thing could give all Americans a job now, and that would be going to 30 hour work week.

  51. Give governors and business leaders a test by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 1

    And see if they can Algebra themselves out of a paper bag.

    a group organized by governors and business leaders and funded by corporations and their foundations

    Their mathematical skills seem to be limited to "innovative and creatively adjusted accounting", economical fibs and down right lies.

    Give them a simple Algebra problem, and they would all delegate it to a subordinate . . . who would google for the answer.

    The hypocrisy . . . the hypocrisy . . . - Colonel Kurtz

    --
    Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
  52. The problem is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...half of the population has an IQ of less than 100.

    Algebra I and II is tough enough for students with an IQ above 100, trying to teach Algebra to students with IQs less than 100 is an uphill battle. And why bother, when are they going to use it.

    I should add that there's no shame in working with your hands; being a plumber or carpenter or mechanic (hell, the plumber down the street earns more than I do), but current opinion seems to be that if you don't have a college education and work in a cube, you're some sort of lesser human.

    If Algebra II is required for graduation, then either more students will be flunking out or more time will be spent trying to bring the slower students up to speed while the brighter students (the ones who would (potentially) benefit from Algebra II) are going to be bored out of their skulls. Either way, they both lose.

    I know it's an unpopular fact, but this is not Lake Wobegon and we forget it to our peril.

  53. Dumbing Down by pubwvj · · Score: 0

    This is dumb. I enjoy math. Algebra was easy, as were all the other maths and I went far beyond what was offered. But I'm a math person. Most people don't need Algebra I never mind Algebra II in the real world. Requiring it is just wasting time and resources. Instead teach what people have the interest and inclination for. The people promoting this don't actually understand math.

  54. Good by acoustix · · Score: 1

    My high school required Algebra II/Trig.

    I think there's another math class that's even more important and should be required by all 50 states: Personal Finance class. In this day and age everyone should know how to take care of their personal finances including loans, investments, purchases, etc.

    --
    "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
  55. In foreign lands... by RJHelms · · Score: 1

    For the benefit for those of us who live outside of Americatown, what is Algebra II? What year would you take it? The II suggest to me 10th grade, is this correct?

    How many math courses are required to graduate in most US high schools now? Also, does USA actually have a national high school curriculum? In Canada referring to a course by name means very little once you cross provincial borders.

    1. Re:In foreign lands... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, the best answer is "it varies". The mainline math curricula in the USA is probably one of these 3 sequences:
      Algebra 1 -> Geometry -> Algebra II -> (Algebra III/Trig by many different names)
      Algebra 1 -> Algebra II -> Geometry - > (Algebra III/Trig by many different names)
      Integrated Math 1 -> IM 2 - > IM 3 -> (Algebra III/Trig by many different names) where they teach mixes of algebra and geometry for 3 years.

      It is very common for college bound students to start at geometry and for those math inclined to start at algebra II.
      3 years/credits of math are generally required to graduate.

      Course Descriptions (from my old high school's website):
      Algebra I: Algebra I includes the study of algebraic concepts including operations with real numbers and polynomials, relations and functions, matrices, creation and application of linear functions and relations, linear regression, and an introduction to nonlinear functions.

      Algebra II: Algebra II continues the students' study of advanced algebraic concepts including functions, regression equations, polynomials, rational expressions, complex numbers, systems of equations and inequalities, and matrices. Emphasis is placed on practical application and modeling.

      The reason that some object is that remedial tracks often look like this at present:
      Pre-Algebra -> Algebra I Part 1 -> Algebra I Part 2 -> Geometry

  56. Silly Usians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and you silly educational system. What the hell is considered "Algebra II" anyway?

  57. This is how you *SHOULD* count back money by sconeu · · Score: 0

    In the US at least:

    "That was $26.37. You gave me $40.00
    counts out pennies
    26.37... 38.. 39.. 40...
    counts out a dime
    50...
    counts out quarters
    75... $27...
    counts out singles
    $28... 29... 30...
    counts out a ten
    and $40. Thank you

    How it actually is.
    "The computer says your change is $13.63. Here you go."

    --
    General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    1. Re:This is how you *SHOULD* count back money by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

      Sadly, this has happened to me.
      "The computer says your change is $13.63"
      "But I only gave you a $10."
      "BUT THE COMPUTER SAYS"
      "No really, are you sure"
      "YES"

      Fine. I'll consider it a tax on your company for hiring idiots.

    2. Re:This is how you *SHOULD* count back money by snspdaarf · · Score: 1

      Which is why, in addition to counting back change, I was taught to put the money on the little shelf between the cash register and the money drawer. But nobody seems to do that anymore either.

      --
      Why, without your clothes, you're naked, Miss Dudley!
    3. Re:This is how you *SHOULD* count back money by sconeu · · Score: 1

      They taught me that too. Graveyard shift at the local 7-11 during summer vacation back in '82/'83

      Where'd you learn?

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    4. Re:This is how you *SHOULD* count back money by snspdaarf · · Score: 1

      Sporting goods/automotive for TG&Y Family Center.

      --
      Why, without your clothes, you're naked, Miss Dudley!
    5. Re:This is how you *SHOULD* count back money by ibpooks · · Score: 2

      When I'm waiting in line behind you at lunchtime, I'd much prefer you count your money on your own time. Walking people step-by-step through basic addition and subtraction on every transaction wastes everyone's time.

    6. Re:This is how you *SHOULD* count back money by sconeu · · Score: 1

      I'm not counting *my* money, I'm counting out the customer's money, to ensure that he gets the correct change.

      And done properly, it takes almost no extra time at all.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    7. Re:This is how you *SHOULD* count back money by jfengel · · Score: 1

      I used to do retail. I tried your way.

      I don't know why it's easier and more accurate for me to count from $0 to $13.63 than from $26.37 to $40. It may be because it works left to right: I put a ten in my hand, and the left digit is taken care of. I count out three ones, and that's taken care of. I know how quarters add up very easily: 25, 50... a dime is 60... three more pennies, done.

      It's a failure of my brain, not of math, but at least in my experience it was easier and therefore more accurate. Yes, I'm depending on the computer to do math, but it's not going to make an arithmetic mistake. If it gives the wrong output it's because I gave the wrong input, and yes, I'd be well aware if I put in $100 when I meant $10.

      It would be particularly painful if the customer handed me $40.12 so that their change would be an even $13.75. Having to keep $40.12 in my mind as the target through the operation would be a pain in the ass. I'd have to start at the beginning: "$26.37... plus a quarter is 52, no, 62... 87, another quarter makes $26.12, no wait, $27.12... hell, mister, just give me it all back. I'm giving you some pennies now and some more pennies at the end and you can hand 'em back to me when we're all done."

      Maybe if I practiced it, I'd be just as good at it either way. But I doubt it's going to be any better. Yes, it would serve me well if the computer went down, and I'd get a lot of practice at my arithmetic skills. Yay.

  58. college degrees cost to much and to much filler by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    college degrees cost to much and have to much filler in them Come on art history for CS??

    You can take all the filler and out a trim it down to 2-3 years.

    also most IT jobs are better learning on the Job then 4 years in the class room with lots of theory with little real work stuff in them.

  59. Backwards logic. Shouldn't even be in HS. by RanceJustice · · Score: 1

    I too Algebra 2 and graduated around 2000. For those of us in the hardest/college prep path, it was basically a requirement. Every smart kid in the magnet program was basically told, "If you don't go Algebra 1 8th grade, Geometry 9th, Algebra 2 10th, Trig 11th, and Calc 12th, you're not going to make it into college. If you elect an Honors class instead of the AP class that requires you to give up lunch every day, you will never make it into a good college. " . Of course, the state requirements at the time only ask for one year of Algebra 1 and one of Geometry. And you know what? That's fine.

    Primary K-12 education should be a place where we instill the BASICS of what we wish EVERYONE in our society to know. There are smart kids that walk out of AP Calculus and grab a 29.80% interest rate credit card when they get to college because they don't have basic financial sense, or overdraft constantly because they can't balance a checkbook. That very same Algebra 1 I took in 8th grade is taught to Bachelor's Degree candidates for a basic math credit in major universities. Hell, there is even a "Functional Math/Remedial Math" in college that counts for everyone but the kids going into the sciences. Does it really belong in primary school?

    The primary school control and structure is basically poisonous and is better suited to creating good little consumers under control, than informed citizens. Its stressful and time consuming to have an 8 period day, filled with honors and AP (college credit) level classes, every day. By the time children pass 8th grade, they should have most of the basics. Let the smart kids who are taking Algebra 1 crammed in with busywork from 7 other classes in 8th grade, just LEAVE. Go take that same Algebra 1 in college. If they want to go to Algebra 2, that's fine.

    Sure, make 12 grades of education available, but restructure it for the entire curriculum to ask the "Would I want every person I meet to absolutely have this skill and does it benefit society?. Reading, yes. Writing and typing, yes. How our government works? Of course. Working knowledge of history for the past 100 years? (Ever wonder why most High Schools, including mine teach from 1700 forward, but never quite make it past WWII? That's by design...). Basic finance, basic maths etc..but despite what most of us geeks may think, the vast population of the country gets along just fine without Algebra II.

    The structure we have here isn't working. People aren't coming out with the kind of skills that are important to function in society, but fumble through "advanced" topics and promptly forget it to make room for the next 7 periods just to prove they're good enough for a college education. I say, set a reasonable curriculum and stick to it - if the "smart" kids are finishing it by the 7th or 8th grade, FINE. Let them go onto other things. These harder subjects are often college material and are meant to be attended to in college, not crammed into high school. If it takes the slower kids 12 years, they skill come out able to operate at an average societal level. We don't need to start regulating Algebra II. Those that want it, will find it.

    1. Re:Backwards logic. Shouldn't even be in HS. by russotto · · Score: 1

      Primary K-12 education should be a place where we instill the BASICS of what we wish EVERYONE in our society to know.

      IMO, we should get that done in K-8 education, as we used to. Or less.

  60. High School... ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I had naturally assumed that it was required by all schools. I took Algebra II in the 9th grade and eventually Calculus as a senior. Even the students that had to take Pre-Algebra in middle school would take Algebra II in the 10th grade at the latest (Algebra I in 9th grade). I had always downed my school for not offering more AP and/or DC classes as well as REAL computer classes... not keyboarding or the like. Somehow, after reading this, I am thankful for my high school for doing something right! (Southeastern VA)

  61. That's 'racist'!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about all the poor third world students who aren't as intelligent as whites?
    Sorry - who are "held down by 'racist' whites and continually oppressed"...

  62. They'll have to water it down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if they want everyone to be able to pass to graduate. That will just wreck it for people who need it as preparation for other courses.

  63. Not relevant for many people by Necron69 · · Score: 1

    Let's be honest, anything beyond very basic algebra is not needed for a great many jobs in this world. Not everyone is going to be an engineer, scientist, doctor, etc.

    My son wants to be an auto mechanic, and since it is the only thing he has ever shown an interest in, I've strongly encouraged this career path. As bonus, this type of job can't be outsourced to India or China.

    I can't think of any benefit to my son, or millions of other high school student to be forced to take Algebra II (I took AP Calculus in high school, but I was going into engineering). What I'd really like to see is a "Consumer Finance 101" type class as a mandatory graduation requirement.

    Necron69

  64. Beyond Mere Correlation by skatull · · Score: 0

    Both California State University systems (University of and Cal State) have Algebra I, Geometry and Algebra II (or advanced Algebra) in the high school subjects required for admission section. Not going to be real successful in those environments without taking Algebra II.

    My two cent's, offer more logic, rhetoric and critical thinking in the schools. (and perhaps on the School Board)

  65. Requirements at the high school level are stupid by PCM2 · · Score: 1, Troll

    It's dumb to talk about "adding more requirements" to a high school education in America. Requirements for what? Graduation? If you tell a student that he can't graduate high school without learning advanced mathematics that he'll never use in his daily life, you'll just end up with fewer high school graduates, not more educated ones.

    K-12 education is compulsory in most states. Until the 12th grade, a low-achieving kid has been forced to be in school. Now you're saying you're going to force him to learn, too? I don't think so. Once that student turns 18, legally there is not a damn thing you can do to keep him in the classroom.

    One side effect of all the emphasis on college education these days is that the message to high school students is that a high school diploma is meaningless and only a college degree gives you any advantage in the workforce. So if you're a student who isn't planning to go to college, why would you bother with a high school diploma? It's worthless, right? Especially if the required coursework includes college preparatory classes like Algebra 2 -- a kid who is not college-bound but is held back at age 18 when all of his friends are graduating is going to walk away, and in his mind it will just be good riddance to high school.

    On the other hand, for college-bound students, Algebra II is a requirement anyway. It's a requirement because it's a prerequisite for other college courses. Every kid knows this, and the ones who want to get into those courses as soon as possible start signing up for the prerequisites in high school. If they don't do well at them in high school, they can usually re-take them at the college level (and they will, if they want to advance). It's all built into the education system; we don't need any artificial "requirements" at the high school level.

    And consider this: In the State of California at least, you do not need a high school diploma to enter the community college program. Let me repeat: There is no prerequisite to enrolling in a community college program other than that you be 18 years of age. So let's say you're a college-bound high school senior who has not yet passed the Algebra II requirement. Are you going to hang around high school for another year, re-taking Algebra II when you've passed all of your other classes? Of course not. You'd enroll in community college and re-take Algebra II while you continue your education, not waste time hanging around an education system that's basically designed to babysit teenagers.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
  66. Among the many problems with this study by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

    Although US economic strength has been attributed in part to high levels of education, the workforce is lagging in the percentage of younger workers with college degrees, according to the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development.

    That statement is borderline nonsense. The US has more younger college grads running around now than it ever had previously. The trouble is that the economy is so lousy that well over 30% of them are not employing their education in their professional careers. Why would anyone (without some sort of political agenda) describe that situation as a shortage of educated workers?

    --
    I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  67. Algebra II should replace Algebra I by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As I recall, most of Algebra I is spent teaching students who have just done 9 years of:
    __ + 3 = 9
    how to solve
    X + 3 = 9
    as if it were a completely new (and much harder) idea.

  68. Kids by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know if any of you have noticed, but the kids these days are fucking idiots. Complete fucking idiots. The rare exceptions have parents that are actively not idiots. It has gotten worse and will continue to get worse as the ruling majority (idiots) grow up into idiot parents.

    I realize all of you reading this on slashdot that have kids are exceptions. You are a minority. Don't get offended at my comments. The idiot parents with idiot kids I'm referring to here are not reading any of this and would not understand the correlation, anyway. They would still be hung up on the, "how are my kids ever going to use this?" question.

    Remember? Those kids that made comments like that when you were in school are the losers of today. They made kids which are now in the public school system. This is why the math and science proficiency levels are dropping with each generation. You can blame the schools and curriculum, but I feel that it would eventually come full circle and you'd be starting back with the parents.

    Raise your kids to feel superior to everyone else, and they will deliver. Raise them with no goals in mind and raise them as a sheep, and they will fizzle out into the human labor farm that most of us are enslaved in. Don't buy them shit they don't need. Every "toy" should be valued as a privileged, and they should never take anything for granted. Not for one second. They should never have anything forced upon them.

    I don't force my beliefs on my kids, but I do answer candidly the questions and comments they come home from school with. They are always questioning a conflict between how they were raised and how the other kids at school are. They know nothing else, so they assume all kids have the same expectations and goals. It was confusing to my youngest daughter at first why the other kids acted like retards and couldn't focus on anything for more than 1 minute. She thought she was in the wrong grade level! I just have to explain to blend in as much as possible and remember that she's superior. Superheros with alter egos in public are a good analogy at her age.

    I also explained that daddy wasn't successful enough to afford a private school were more students would be smarter, and that I'm sorry. I explain that's why it's so important she understand all of this now so she can be successful enough to put her kids through private school.

    Also, you need to have your wife smoke pot daily while carrying the infant. It completely eliminates the incident of ADHD and makes them calm and focused without additional medication after birth. Substantially decreases the possibility of depression, also. I have multiple data points I'm basing this on.

  69. Abstract and critical thinking by dbc · · Score: 1

    There are a lot of posts saying "well, it's opt-in and college prep, so don't confuse correlation with causation". OK, I buy that, but here is something else to think about.

    Critical thinking skills.

    The main thing missing from modern education is teaching critical thinking skills at an early age. Algebra, by it's nature, requires developing both critical thinking skills and abstract thinking skills. There are a lot of ways to teach both of those skills outside of algebra. That is what the education system should be trying to achieve.

    If you have good critical thinking skills you won't confuse anecdotes with data -- so here are some anecdotes to consider:

    I once worked in a research division where I was surrounded by very smart Ph.D.'s. I noted that the corner office did *not* go to the guy with the highest IQ, it went to the guy with the best bullshit detector. Excuse me: best critical thinking skills. It's one thing to be able to work out an answer -- it's another thing entirely to be able to ask the right questions.

    A friend of mine is a genuine Okie -- as in when he was a kid his family went back and forth between California and Oklahoma during the depression -- his dad would get a little money picking fruit in Cal, head back to OK and start ranching again, go bankrupt, head back to California.... lather, rinse, repeat. His mom was a big believer in education and *insisted* that my friend complete the 8th grade, which he did. He went on to become a farm and ranch manager, as in several dozens of workers, directed a multi-million dollar capital investment, and had access to a plane and pilot for weekly crop inspections. He is financially very comfortable. That man has one of the best bullshit detector I've ever seen.

    Give kids good critical thinking skills. Bonus points for giving them abstract thinking. Everything else is just a tool in service of those two.

    Teach kids how to ask the right questions.

    1. Re:Abstract and critical thinking by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Algebra, by it's nature, requires developing both critical thinking skills and abstract thinking skills.

      Abstract thinking, obviously. But critical thinking?

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    2. Re:Abstract and critical thinking by dbc · · Score: 1

      Yes. Try to work a proof without being able to ask the right questions or plan in the face of incomplete data.

    3. Re:Abstract and critical thinking by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      That's not critical thinking. Critical thinking is about doubting. When you have to proof something (at least in school, and that's what we are talking about) then you can assume that it's true. You can also assume that anything you were taught before and which you might use for your proof is true.

      For critical thinking, probably non-Euclidean geometry is best (if taught that way): It is actually based on doubt (about the axiom of parallels), and when proceeding, you simply cannot take for granted what you learned from Euclidean geometry. You start with an alternative to the axiom of parallels, proof things which just seem wrong, and then, after you have basically been convinced that it is nonsense, you are given an explicit example where you see that all that "nonsense" indeed holds.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  70. gimmie a brake by luther349 · · Score: 1

    the only reasion employers are demanding a higher educated workforce is becouse they can. due to the friggin depression. everyone needs jobs that are not there and whont be there untill we fix some major issues hear. so they can demand insane regs for the jobs. unlike when most people had jobs and they would hire anyone willing to work.

    1. Re:gimmie a brake by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      Was your post satire?

    2. Re:gimmie a brake by modi123 · · Score: 1

      High-five your English teachers for me, bro! I hope this was an ironicly misspelled post. If not I weep.

      Are these "major issues hear" crucial flaws inherent to the system - masked by years of government corruption and avoidance, or are they simple things like "employees unable to find jobs because they cannot spell search terms right"?

  71. Errr by bhcompy · · Score: 1

    Algebra 2 was required for me in HS.. as well as a third year of math(be it trig and precalc, stats, or consumer math for the dummies)

  72. Re:Requirements at the high school level are stupi by luther349 · · Score: 1

    its just due to are crappy ass ecnomy right now. they can demand insane things to get a rather shittty job. becouse there is not enough jobs to go around. now when it reverses and thers plenty of jobs and not enough workforce they stop caring and if your willing to work they hire you educated or not. just supply and demand with people.

  73. Re:Among the many problems with this study by luther349 · · Score: 1

    ayea i agree i knoe a few frends that spent a good chunk of change on collage and have crappy jobs. why becouse there field got outsourced.

  74. Antiquated School System by datavirtue · · Score: 1

    I watched 10 minutes of Trig videos the other day that cured 2 hours of classroom torture. I don't know about any of you, but math class has always been useless to me. Maybe it is just the small bites (Khan videos) that are so easy to consume? Khan makes my math life so much easier. Now I just daydream in class, get my credit, then go home and learn it myself using Google and Khan Academy. On top of that, I watched another 10 minutes and moved ahead of the class!

    --
    I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
  75. Damn Good thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good. Most kids these day can graduate High School with Minimal Math Skills. Honestly Math is used everyday. So forcing kids to understand basic mathmatics is a key to a brighter future of the next generation. Im probably biased because I had AP Calculus my Junior Year of High School. BUt it is amazing how little Most and almost to 80% of graduating persons know about any higher level math or thinking. In my graduating class ( thanks to face book) alot of people are low-lifes who drink allday , have no job, and are popping out kids left and right and have zero motivation to advanced themselves. Granted I Graduated in 2008, but as of today Im a VP for a Large Manufacturing Companyin charge of honestly, ALL OPERATIONS.. WIth little post-secondary education. Why?? Because i Knew how to think two steps ahead of the curve.( And a ridiculously high stress tolerence) But this is just my .02 cents.

    1. Re:Damn Good thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All that time taking math class and you should have spent more time and effort in an English class. As VP of a "Large Manufacturing Companyin" one would think you'd at least take the time to properly express your thoughts. Random capitalization, double punctuations, grammar... I'm going to stop here and let you think so you can catch up.

  76. Requiring it won't change ANYTHING. by Sosetta · · Score: 1

    The school where I taught math had a strong department of math teachers.

    Algebra II was required. But it didn't mean anything. If a student can't pass the class, they just talk to their counselor, and get moved into a computer-math class, which doesn't require anywhere close to the same level of understanding.

    The fact that a student can't (or won't) pass a particular math class will not prevent them from graduating high school. There are too many alternate paths.

    I think it would be a very good thing if everyone DID understand the material in an Algebra II class, but I don't see it happening. Locally, at least 10% of the adult population never passed Algebra I.

  77. How great can Algebra II and Algebra III be if they are still using Roman numerals?

  78. wow by buddyglass · · Score: 1

    This has got to be one of the more egregious "correlation != causation" errors I've seen lately. Why might a student having taken Algebra II correlate highly with later success? Perhaps precisely because it is optional. The set of students who voluntarily choose to take an optional math class is likely to have an abundance of other traits that contribute to success. A love of learning, ambition, general mathematics ability, parents who're riding them to achieve, etc. I see little evidence to suggest that if all students were required to take Algebra II we'd see a commensurate jump in the aggregate achievement of all students.

    Allow me to suggest that if all students were required to take statistics in high school we might see fewer ridiculous correlation/causation errors like this in the popular press.

  79. This should be saying Jr high by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kids are so much more capable of learning than we give them credit for ...
    They should be starting Algebra in the 6th grade Geometry in the 7th and Algebra II in the 8th.
    This assumes them being given the appropriate foundation in K-5.

    Obviously this would require decent teachers and herein lies the problem...
    Anyone qualified to really teach math and science above the basics can usually
    find higher paying jobs outside of teaching. ... and don't get me started on
            Standardized testing and funding based on how well they do,
              "Leave The Smart Kids Behind" (No Child Left Behind),
              Social promotion and Not allowing kids to actually fail,
              and ESL Programs.

  80. I skipped it. by durdur · · Score: 1

    I sat down first day in Algebra II, looked over the text book, discovered I knew it already, and asked to be excused. I took trig instead. Then I took Calculus because I needed the units, but I'd already been through my dad's old college calculus text. Then I got permission to duck out of high school 3 times a week to take 2nd year calculus at a local college. I was lucky they were flexible enough to let me do all this.

    1. Re:I skipped it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aren't you such a special, special flower!

  81. Education or Schooling. by Oxford_Comma_Lover · · Score: 1

    I agree regarding semesters and math courses.

    However, with respect, your argument would be more effective if you didn't generalize to Americans. A lot of Americans DO value education and the fact that many of them are on slashdot reflects it.

    (The extent to which they value schooling is another matter entirely.)

    --
    -- IANAL, this isn't legal advice, and definitely isn't legal advice for you. Also, Squee!
    1. Re:Education or Schooling. by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      I understand generalization does not capture the exceptions and I would expect this to be understood whenever a generalization is made. However, generalizations do a fair job of capturing the majority which was my intention.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    2. Re:Education or Schooling. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd support a further generalisation:

      Western nations.

  82. Why are there 4 years of english and not math? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've never understood the complete lack of required math curriculum or available options. Algebra is extremely useful in today's world where Geometry and Calculus are very selective in their uses. I have never once used proofs in my career and very rarely used Calculus if at all.

    On the other side, I despised English 11th grade+. Useless memorization of words no one uses. The reading of literature most of the world forgot that has little impact on my view of the world. The only classes it helped me for were college english classes. That's it. The majority of the papers I had to write in college were completely different and had very set formats.

    High school should be focused on the wide range of skills people need to succeed in today. Those of us that choose to go to college (and can make it) should take more advanced courses that schools should offer based on needs. The majority of kids in High School won't go to college. If they do they need to be better prepared.

    Our public schools are falling behind. That's why more and more parents are sending their kids to charter or private schools and incurring the debt that comes with it. I compared my wife's private schooling to my own public schooling and I was woefully behind in everything when I got to college.

    I honestly believe that highschools should remove 1 year of english and replace it with a math requirement. The 4th year of english should be an elective.

  83. How about competent Algebra teachers? by wcrowe · · Score: 1

    A think a more reliable predictor would be having a competent Algebra II teacher. If Algebra II had been required in my high school I would never have graduated. Neither would have a lot of other people. The Algebra I teacher was that bad. It wasn't until I got to college that I finally encountered someone who could teach me Algebra.

    --
    Proverbs 21:19
  84. Statistics and Financial Math by Oxford_Comma_Lover · · Score: 3, Insightful

    For most people, it would be more useful to teach either statistics or financial math than calculus. We teach calculus because it's next in math or engineering education. But for ANY of the social sciences and several of the sciences statistics is more useful, and for life financial math is more useful.

    --
    -- IANAL, this isn't legal advice, and definitely isn't legal advice for you. Also, Squee!
    1. Re:Statistics and Financial Math by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

      I agree with you there.

      Statistics, probability, and data analysis are much more generally important than calculus. The concepts of a limit, derivative, and integral are important for general understanding, but too much effort is spent on learning tricks to analytically compute integrals, instead of actually applying the concepts to data.

  85. This is stupid by ghjm · · Score: 1

    There's no magic content to Algebra II that makes you smarter. If you were smarter to begin with, you're more likely to want to take Algebra II.

    Algebra II is the first math class you can take that you don't *have* to take to graduate. Therefore, the choice to take Algebra II demonstrates a desire for accomplishment beyond the minimum. It is hardly surprising that people with this desire go on to achieve things in later life.

    If you make Algebra II mandatory, this differentiation will be lost. Algebra II will lose its predictive power of future success, and Algebra III or Precalculus or whatever will become predicive.

    Not that I'm against making algebra mandatory for high school students. Personally, I think trigonometry and introductory calculus should be mandatory for high school students. But even if the conclusion is right, the method of arriving at it is wrong.

  86. TEACHING MATH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is -- teacher's haven't proven their ability to teach kids how to read, let alone how to succeed with Algebra. One of the greatest keys to success in math is solution keys: http://www.brainsarefun.com/solution.html.

  87. Ignorance is sometimes okay. by Oxford_Comma_Lover · · Score: 1

    > Full blown math and science should be required for everyone.

    I don't know the details of why quantum mechanics is inconsistent with general relativity. As I use neither in my day-to-day-life, or EVER directly, it bugs me only a little bit, and only normatively--I certainly don't expect everyone to know the answer. I would be happy with a world where it simply bugged everyone only a little bit, because people should love to learn and to understand the universe. But particular learning and knowledge should not be required in any field beyond a certain point, and the question is where that threshold should lie for math.

    The more advanced the material we expect someone to have a broad spectrum knowledge of, the more resourced we are committing to generalist education at the expense of many other things.

    --
    -- IANAL, this isn't legal advice, and definitely isn't legal advice for you. Also, Squee!
  88. It's been a while, so remind me, by RightwingNutjob · · Score: 1

    is Algebra II the first class where kids are weened off of using just numbers in math? If memory serves, that little bit of abstraction is the first time that the men are separated from the boys, and I don't doubt that's what indicates the success, not the PR-mandated "II" in the course title.

  89. Wait, what? Algebra in HIGH SCHOOL by hackel · · Score: 1, Informative

    Don't most people take Algebra II in Junior High? I skipped it entirely myself... What level of maths do most U.S. high schools require? If it's not even Algebra II then I would say that's yet another sign of how pathetic the U.S. education system has become. Personally, I found Calculus to be one of the most beneficial, eye-opening maths classes I had in high school and think every student should be required to complete it. It can be used in so many different scenarios and yet still most people graduate from high school thinking all but basic math is useless!

  90. Alternative Suggestion by Tablizer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    To be frank, for most occupations Algebra II is simply not necessary, and most will forget it anyhow.

    I suggest that Boolean logic, set theory, and basic statistics be required instead. Those are more applicable to the actual work world. As manufacturing drifts overseas and the US specializes in fads, marketing, and finance, "physical" math is less needed, while discrete and statistical math is replacing it as a need.
         

    1. Re:Alternative Suggestion by yuna49 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I would like to see more emphasis on statistics in high school as well. Too many otherwise intelligent people don't understand things like random sampling, estimation, and error. We'd have a lot fewer of those, "how can only 1,000 people in a poll represent the opinions of 250 million adults" types of questions.

      Sadly we still see those types of comments here at Slashdot.

      BTW, there's very little in statistics that requires more than Algebra I.

    2. Re:Alternative Suggestion by lahvak · · Score: 1

      there's very little in statistics that requires more than Algebra I.

      Actually, a large chunk of statistics requires multivariable calculus, and some of it even measure theory, but if you are talking about introductory statistics, than yes, introductory algebra is all you need.

      --
      AccountKiller
    3. Re:Alternative Suggestion by yuna49 · · Score: 1

      Yes, I was talking about what would be needed if a unit of statistics were added to the HS curriculum.

      I taught graduate-level econometrics for political scientists in an earlier life. There was often a lot of linear algebra on the board when I finished a class. Maximum-likelhood techniques were just coming into vogue at the time, too.

    4. Re:Alternative Suggestion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      education is about teaching students how to think NOT about teaching them to fill up jobs. Schools are not (and should not be) factories for training students to fit jobs.

    5. Re:Alternative Suggestion by randyleepublic · · Score: 0

      No fucking way will that ever happen. Those are precisely the sorts of classes we do not want kids to take. Those classes demand that one think. They teach one to think about thinking. People who think, and think about thinking, do not make "good" consumers.

      --
      Social Credit would solve everything...
    6. Re:Alternative Suggestion by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      That point is perhaps semi-debatable (it's both), but even if I agreed, how is Alg.II better at that task than say statistics?

    7. Re:Alternative Suggestion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The ability to perform optimizations as an estimation problem in one's head is an invaluable skill that is used every day in every job. It is also necessary for any real intelligent discourse on politics and the future of our nation. I work with many people who do not have this skill and they are only able to do their job because someone else taught them "the way it has always been done". The people don't understand why it's done that way, or how things work/operate, but they can get their job done and get it done well.

      I can't believe Algebra 2 is not required of kids in America. Over 15 years ago I was taking Algebra 2 in 8th grade (here, in America even). Americans are fooling themselves if they think the nation can survive in the world through self-righteous indignation at their own stupidity.

  91. Waiting for Superman by SirWinston · · Score: 2

    Everyone should watch the school documentary Waiting for Superman:

    http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100929/REVIEWS/100929981

    It's possible to take the same group of kids from the same underprivileged neighborhood, and send some of them to public schools where 50% will fail to graduate, and send some from the same pool to charter schools where *for less money per student* 90% will go on to attend college. It really is all about the schools, teachers, and methods, not the students, neighborhoods, or money.

    The biggest culprit is teacher tenure. After a measly 2 years of teaching, public school teachers can get tenure and be almost impossible to fire for the rest of their lives, even if they're actively bad at their jobs. At the university level tenure is a useful tool for retaining teachers with unconventional views, who add to the campus experience; but at the high school level tenure is useless since kids have too many basics to learn for unconventional views to be given time. We should institute merit pay for teachers, and eliminate tenure--good teachers could make twice what average ones make, and bad ones could be fired.

    --
    "It's a damn poor mind that can only think of one way to spell a word."--Andrew Jackson
    1. Re:Waiting for Superman by pnutjam · · Score: 2

      People harp on tenure all the time. I'm not entirely sure it exists in the way most people seem to think it does in most states. Anyway, the problem is really a management issue. If administrators didn't hold onto people who "might" work out those people would never get "tenure". I see it all the time in private industry or anywhere else. There are plenty of people who are terrible at their job, and people are either to lazy to fire them, or to non-confrontational. When I go somewhere as a temp and have people telling me to slow down, there is a problem.

    2. Re:Waiting for Superman by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I go somewhere as a temp and have people telling me to slow down, there is a problem.

      I got reassigned from one temp job to another one time. I'm pretty sure the straw that broke the camel's back was showing their accountant how to count forms quickly and acurately. Instead of 1, 2, 3 (lose track)... It was 12345, stack, 12345, stack... 5 stacks are 25. 4 of those are 100.

      I was "overqualified" for this efficient counting technique, among other things. Fortunately I moved back with my folks in a large metropolitan area where I could get a real job.

  92. Re:Among the many problems with this study by Antisyzygy · · Score: 1

    The trouble is that 70 percent of people that get degrees get it in worthless disciplines like marketing or management. Management is basically common sense with basic business education thrown in. You only make a good manager if you would have been one without education anyway. Plenty of worthless managers have degrees in management, but have no common sense nor organizational skills. They would be better off getting some kind of hybrid degree between business law and accounting. At least then they could successfully handle something in business.

    --
    That brings me to an interesting point, / . is just "the ramblings of socially-inept, technology-literate news-mongers".
  93. Just take the class by gatkinso · · Score: 1

    Is it really that big of a deal? Take the class and be done with it.

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  94. Re:Wait, what? Algebra in HIGH SCHOOL by BitterOak · · Score: 1

    It's even worse here in Canada. They don't offer Algebra II in middle school OR high school. I took it in my freshman year at university.

    --
    If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
  95. For Canadians? by kirkb · · Score: 1

    Not sure what "Algebra II" is, but many slashdotters mention taking it in grade 10 (but 9 for some; 11 for others).

    FWIW, in BC (not sure about the rest of Canada), you need a minimum of grade 11 Math to graduate.

    --
    Slashdot: come for the pedantry, stay for the condescension.
  96. Relabel the books by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So this is how it's going to work out: 1) take Alg I curriculum and dilute it to take two years; 2) label second year as Alg II 3) adjust No Child Gets Ahead testing to reflect this, 4) people feel good because all students now have taken Alg II. 5) Schools get to feel good because their students are "succeding".

    But nowhere in this have the students learned any new material. Et voila, ca c'est bon.

  97. Tiered HS education? by kirkb · · Score: 1

    I was educated in the classic "K thru 12 then college" system, and it worked out well for me.

    But in retrospect, I wish there was a way for people who can't/won't finish through grade 12 to graduate early (at grade 10 or 11) and then move on to service industry jobs or tradesmen certifications without the stigma of being a "dropout". Is this how the UK's O-Level and A-Level works? I like the idea of a 16-year old getting into cooking school or plumbing or landscaping once they've developed an adequate level of literacy and math skills (probably not Algebra II).

    --
    Slashdot: come for the pedantry, stay for the condescension.
  98. They Will Cheat by b4upoo · · Score: 1

    Many school systems will simply give a very weak course in Algebra II rather than the pre college academic Algebra II classes like we had back in the 1950s. I seriously doubt that most students would be able to complete such a course these days. Even in the colleges many courses have been diluted and turned into baby like courses. If you require most students to actually learn they simply drop out of school. The GED has caused this and must be halted. It is a lot easier to drop out and then take a watered down GED course than to actually get a high school education. And sadly it will cause social and racial chaos if teaching returns to our schools. And to make it worse there is a current concept of punishing teachers if the kids fail or drop out.
              How many states are really willing to let the outside world know about the quality of their schools? ZERO

  99. Really it's "selection bias" by yuna49 · · Score: 1

    Observational studies like the CEEB report mentioned in the article suffer from the problem of self-selection. If we could conduct a pure experimental study, we'd assign students randomly to a "treatment" group, who then take Algebra II, and a "control" group, who do not. Because the assignments are randomized, any observed differences in performance between the groups can be assigned to taking Algebra II.

    In reality, students select themselves into the treatment and control groups. This won't matter if the factor(s) that distinguish these two groups are uncorrelated with the measured outcomes. In this case, though, it's very likely that future success in life may have something to do with things like intelligence and determination, which are also likely to influence the decision to take Algebra II.

    Anyone who wants to understand these issues should read Campbell & Stanley's Experimental and Quasi-Experimental Designs for Research. Though the book is nearly fifty years old, it still remains a clear and cogent explanation of inferential problems in most social research. The original is out of print, but an updated version is at Amazon.

    By the way, the comments by report's author in TFA show the researchers are well aware of this problem.

  100. Same here by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    only it was the 90's. Back then our store's register didn't display the change so you had to do it yourself. normally that's not too hard, but when you do 2-300 transactions a night after spending the entire day pounding the street looking for a permanent job, it gats hard to stay within the $2.00 limit for till errors.

  101. You guys are weird. by isomer1 · · Score: 1

    I wish you 'Correlation != Causation' nutjobs could put down the sauce and actually consider the issue.

    Have you EVEN CONSIDERED that the concepts taught in Algebra II might in fact have a CAUSAL relationship with later success? Look through the core concepts listed below and ask yourself (A) would knowing these concepts be critical for success in pure science and engineering coursework? (B) would knowing these concepts be useful for social sciences? (C) could the mental gymnastics practiced in algebra 2 help develop the critical thinking necessary for harder subjects?

    You guys go on and on about how politicians etc. have no science background and then go batshit crazy the moment someone suggests that 'hard' math/science should be part of a core curriculum. As a practicing scientist I use the below core concepts literally every day (matlab ftw), and I certainly wish more people were walking around with a working knowledge of these subjects. Even english & art majors would benefit from knowing these concepts.

    Absurdity note: As probability and statistics are part of the algebra 2 core, a person would HAVE TO KNOW ALGEBRA 2 to even understand the 'correlation != causation' arguement.

    Per random googling, here is a basic algebra 2 core:

    1. Equations and Inequalities
    2. Linear Equations and Functions
    3. Systems of Linear Equations and Inequalities
    4. Matrices and Determinants
    5. Quadratic Functions
    6. Polynomials and Polynomial Functions
    7. Powers, Roots, and Radicals
    8. Exponential and Logarithmic Functions
    9. Rational Equations and Functions
    10. Quadratic Relations and Conic Sections
    11. Sequences and Series
    12. Probability and Statistics
    13. Trigonometric Ratios and Functions
    14. Trigonometric Graphs, Identities, and Equations
  102. Re:Wait, what? Algebra in HIGH SCHOOL by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

    Don't most people take Algebra II in Junior High?

    I think Algebra I is what most people take in Junior High. Or pre-algebra.

    Your statement is evidence of why Algebra II is such a good indicator. If someone hasn't completed it by 12th grade, they probably aren't the brightest bulb in the lot, and they probably aren't college bound. So forcing them to take it earlier just means that whatever other course they missed will become the leading predictor of success.

  103. Clearly we don't have enough dropouts by Eightbitgnosis · · Score: 1

    We need to engineer some more now!
    At least the GED tests are still very easy

  104. Leading Predictors... by hackus · · Score: 1

    Mmmmm...

    How about these items which are not discussed for a leading predictor for doing well in school. I am not just talking about Mathematics either:

    1) Banks Destroying the currency of a nation so that nobody can find work, and killing the ability for the average family to have a stable environment.

    2) No Work means more food Stamps, starting a hopeless spiral of poverty specifically designed to create more poverty.

    3) 1/4 to now 1/3 children are underfed or on food stamps, never discussed in the news becasue Republicans and Democrats control the media.

    4) Looting and stealing of educational institutions for pennies while the banks and government rip people off to the tune of trillions of dollars? Carefully controlled media driving home that only if we destroy all social programs, magically the 2 trillion a year on 4 wars can get bigger and will save us all.

    5) Systematically destroying the countries ability to tax citizens by removing its industrial and manufacturing centers by "American Corporations" which are hardly American and owned or are now offshore in foreign countries. GE is just one example where no taxes are ever paid in the billions.

    Still small change when you consider what the republican and democratic parties are doing along with the Federal Reserve.

    -Hack

    --
    Got Geometrodynamics? Awe, too hard to figure out? Too bad.
  105. Re:Among the many problems with this study by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You only make a good manager if you would have been one without education anyway.

    Just like computer programing, eh?

  106. Re:Wait, what? Algebra in HIGH SCHOOL by whrrr · · Score: 0

    The contents of Algebra II are more-or-less integrated throughout the 10/20/30 level highschool courses, at least in Alberta. I can't see things being radically different nation-wide. I think you are confusing algebra with 100-level calculus.

  107. Re:Wait, what? Algebra in HIGH SCHOOL by McSnickered · · Score: 1

    I spent my teenage years during the 1980's - this is how the math curriculum was administered in an affluent suburb of Seattle at the time (when Jr. High was prevalent. Grades 7-9):

    Jr. High:
    7th Grade - Everyone took "7th Grade Math". There weren't different levels of "7th Grade Math", everyone took the same class. We spent all of the class and homework doing endless problems of long division and multiplication. It sucked.

    8th Grade - Everyone took "Pre-Algebra". This was our first exposure in school to solving for X

    9th Grade - Everyone took "Algebra 1". We had a math book from the 1960's that was awful.

    High School:
    10th Grade - Everyone took "Geometry". Fun class - I liked it.

    11th Grade - Only students interested in a math-related career continued taking math at this point. It was "Algebra 2" and included Trigonometry.

    12th Grade - Only students REALLY interested in math-related careers took math their last year of high school. This was called "Math Analysis" and was essentially Pre-Calc.

    There actually was a Calculus class at our high school, but there were only about 5 students who could take it, and they were a very select few who had been allowed to skip the 7th Grade math experience to take the "more advanced" Pre-Algebra class. There was only 1 such kid in my 7th Grade class that got to do this.

    So now fast forward to today in a rural state famous for potatoes. When my oldest son was in 5th grade, ALL the 5th graders were allowed to take a math test, that if they passed, would give them the opportunity to take "Pre Algebra" as 6th graders (rather than my sad experience of having to wait till 8th grade). My son passed and is now taking "Algebra 1" as a 7th grader. If he stays on track, he'll be in Calculus in 11th grade, and university-level Calculus in 12th grade. Although this is probably about average to lower average for Europe/Asia, it's considered a fairly rigorous schedule for the United States.

    While I want to bemoan our country's struggles with math and science education, I also have to acknowledge how far things have progressed in the last 25 years. Whether or not today's students take advantage of the opportunities they have now, at least they HAVE some decent opportunities!

    --
    They call me the working man. I guess that's what I am.
  108. Algebra what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So for this poor non-american, would anyone care to shed light on how this Algebra 2.0 thing differs from regular algebra?

    1. Re:Algebra what? by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

      Algebra 2.0 is the new, exciting, web-based algebra that uses an intuitive graphical user interface that just really pops. The whole visual experience is enhanced with spirited artwork, stimulating dynamic content, and an innovated challenge-response mechanism to generate accelerated educational growth among students.

  109. Self-selection bias by Larry_Dillon · · Score: 1

    All this proves is that students that opt to take and complete algebra II do better. In my high school, everyone who elected to be in algebra II was planning on going to college. Of course such student do better in college! This in no way proves that forcing students that aren't good at math to take algebra II is some how magically going to make them more successful.

    This reminds me of the study (from Canada) that said that drivers who voluntarily turned on their headlights during the day were in much fewer accidents, so the government made headlight use during the day mandatory. The seem to have failed to consider that the voluntary headlight users were more safety conscious and it had little to do with increased visibility.

    There are many things that people need know to get along in modern life. It's a shame that so few are taught in high school.

    --
    Competition Good, Monopoly Bad.
  110. Re:Archimedes screw by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

    Awesome. I don't actually have a boat, but that's a pretty cool use of ancient technology.

  111. Momentum? by Bacon+Bits · · Score: 1

    Momentum? Ain't that Physics?

    --
    The road to tyranny has always been paved with claims of necessity.
  112. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  113. WTF is it? by frisket · · Score: 1

    So WTF is Algebra II? It looks just like the regular algebra we did in high school, except it's been dumbed down by giving the answers. If you want to test whether they can do algebra, give them just the questions and let them work out the answer themselves. Who are the dumbfuck teachers who think this is a good idea?

  114. Goodhart's Law strikes again by Antisuji · · Score: 1

    Yes, the usual comments on confusing correlation and causation are relevant, but in the case of the proposed policy change the more applicable phenomenon is this: "Any observed statistical regularity will tend to collapse once pressure is placed upon it for control purposes." See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodhart's_law .

  115. Whoever created this test didn't take Algebra II by lsh123 · · Score: 1

    The second question asks a student to represent (3i - 1) / (-2 - 4i) in the form a + bi. This is obviously impossible (hint: if you know nothing about math, simply try i = - 1/2 for the original formula and all the answers in the graphic). Not to mention that the answer to the 3rd question is also incorrect. Total score is 66% success for questions and 33% for answers. Neither is a pass.

  116. Correlation != Causation, but it plays one on tv by TiggertheMad · · Score: 1

    Is this sort of like the study where student who sit at the front of the class did better on average than students sitting at the back of the class? I tried to move to the front of the class, but strangely my grades did not improve. I also loved this line:

    ...the workforce is lagging in the percentage of younger workers with college degrees, according to the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development.

    Is this because kids aren't tanking algebra 2, (sarcasm people, not really asking...) or because we are in ha huge recession, and state educational budgets are being slashed like crazy, reducing funding for public higher education? Here in Washington, tuition for public universities is going to be hiked for something like the third or four year straight. Perhaps there are less kids getting degrees, because nobody can afford it....

    --

    HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
  117. Is the bar really this low? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We should be teaching calculus to early elementary schoolers.
    Are kids so screwed up now that they shouldn't be able to pick it up sooner?

  118. Elective? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I didn't know it was an option. HS took me through Algebra I, II, & III then geometry, trig, & calculus...I thought only trig & calculus were optional. I loved math until calculus mainly because both my calculus & physics teachers were mean-spirited old coots that were bitter about life & projected their own suffering on the students...

  119. Revisit math education of 1940s/1950s ... by perpenso · · Score: 1

    Although what we REALLY need a class on is "common sense" how to deal with money. Interest, balancing a 'checkbook'/banking account. Hell I'd settle for 'this is how you count back money.'

    That's what Home Economics used to be...

    Perhaps revisiting the math education system of the 1940s/1950s would be helpful. Here's what I learned from my grandmother recently. What they got wrong back then was that there was some prejudgement as to whether or not a student was college material. If you were judged a "not" it was difficult to get into the college prep classes. What they got right was that in high school there was four years of math, period. You were either in the college prep math series or the practical/vocational math series. The later included balancing your checkbook, making sure your paycheck was correct (1.5x for overtime, 2x for sundays, etc), converting between units and using fractions in cooking recipe and lumber yard type applications, etc.

    When I was in high school only one year of math was required - pitiful. Perhaps we need to bring back the practical/vocation type of math classes (modernized of course) and require three or four years of math?

  120. Re:Correlation is not Custard by Nefarious+Wheel · · Score: 1

    Should any of you younger ./ers have any hope of procreating. Learn to cook. It's like edible science.

    Agreed - you should be able to build yourself breakfast, lunch and dinner with a minimum of prepared foods. It's not hard, kids - and it'll save you cash, impress the ladies (and this is *definitely* where making the effort counts!), and keep you healthier than the folks who are living off day-old pizza and ramen noodles.

    Daily breakfast builds are good. It's an iterative procedure, but you can't just cook the changes each day, except in trivial cases. You generally have to cook the whole meal if you want to procreate. Most otherwise compatible partners might not be able to integrate simple changes -- say, if you substituted pepper for salt; a plate of pepper alone for breakfast (the simple change) can't be integrated into yesterday's meal. At least that's the way for me, my fridge doesn't understand Subversion.

    --
    Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
  121. Not everything is testable by pavon · · Score: 1

    Over the years that I have been in school there have been a ton of things that we learned that couldn't be determined by a simple test. No amount of short essays will tell you how good a student is at structuring a long research paper or defended argument. No amount of short word problems will show you if a student is capable of applying what he learned the way a math or science design project will.

    I've taken qualifying exams and the such, and they aren't any better to teach against than crappy exams. They are harder, because there is a lot more information you have to cram into your head and spit back out with no spare time to think, but it still doesn't represent an accurate assessment of how well you really understand and are able to apply the subject.

    I've had teachers that taught against the test, and their classes were worthless. No improvements to the test will make them teach any better, but as long a test grades are what schools are judged on, teachers like that will be safe in their jobs.

  122. ignoramus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The goal is to produce fewer people like you.
    Algebra II covers graphs of equations (parallel and perpendicular functions, slope of a line, hyperbolic equations, circle equation), systems of equations, quadratic equations, complex numbers, exponents and logarithms (including compound interest formulas), matrix math (mostly addition and multiplication).

  123. requiring != learning by bcrowell · · Score: 1

    I teach physics at a community college in California, a state in which Algebra I has been a high school graduation requirement since 2003. Virtually all of my students are high school graduates, and probably 80% of them graduated later than 2003. But guess what? Many of my students can't do algebra. Actually, some of them have passed a year of calculus at the college where I teach -- and nevertheless are surprised when I point out to them that sqrt(a+b) cannot be simplified to sqrt(a)+sqrt(b).

    The problem is that we have an irresistible force encountering an immovable object. Students and teachers are told that the students must learn X or else the teachers will lose their jobs, and the students will never be able to get jobs, except maybe ones where you make minimum wage with no benefits for licking bird crap off of park benches. That creates an irresistible incentive to pretend that the students have learned X. We can let X equal a fluent reading knowledge of ancient Hebrew, and I guarantee you that schools and their students will start pretending that their students can do that.

  124. glad no one told me this factoid in high school by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny, though I pulled A's in math through most of high school, I pulled a solid D in algebra 2. I went on to get a math degree, so I am writing it off as an outlier in my math career, and subsequently that I must be something of an oulier in american education trends. Go figure.

  125. Re:Correlation != Causation, but it plays one on t by ultranova · · Score: 1

    Is this because kids aren't tanking algebra 2, (sarcasm people, not really asking...) or because we are in ha huge recession, and state educational budgets are being slashed like crazy, reducing funding for public higher education?

    Or perhaps they're lying to attract more people to the field, in order to keep up unemployment there and depress wages?

    I have noticed that when someone talks of "workforce shortages", that's almost always the case.

    --

    Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  126. This Guarantees Algebra II will be Irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No matter where you set the minimum bar, you will find that people who take more math than the absolute minimum are more likely to be successful in life.

    We shouldn't be surprised that 84% of the people who are successful took more than the minimum required math. So, if you look at the most successful people, say 84% of them took Algebra II when it was not required. Does that mean requiring it will make everyone else more successful? I don't think so. If everyone took Algebra II, then there would be no statistical difference between people who did and didn't take it.

  127. Algebra II, and its complexities are being... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Algebra II has complexities?

  128. Here's one to ponder by jonaskoelker · · Score: 1

    I agree with your pick of topics, and would like to add one

    Consider this: people vote about once every four years (or is it two? And how about non-voters? But I digress...).

    People engage in market transactions about once per day (working five days a week, buying groceries saturday and toys/clothes/tickets/... sundays).

    Much policy is economic policy, in that it has an intended economic consequence (cheaper healthcare) or cost (military-industrial complex).

    How come kids are taught civics and not economics? You can teach people that in the US two-party system, any non-Dem, non-Rep vote is wasted in something like five minutes. Teaching people the consequences of policies (so they can match them against intentions, both their own and those stated in campaign promises) takes a little longer. Also, economics goes a long way to explain the lobbying, corruption and two-party system in the US, once you understand how the incentives of large numbers of individuals interact.

    And hey, I bet school kids would hate math a tiny little bit less if they saw how it applies to part of their world ("why do ${products young people want} cost what they cost?").

  129. What is Algebra II? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I read TFA, and I'm still not sure. It talks about imaginary numbers, quadratics and logs, but I learned all of that (with the exception of logs) in a PA public middle school Algebra I.

    When I took Algebra II in a PA public high school, it was a hodge-podge of linear algebra (which was also part of an Algebra I high school course from a private school in PA before I went back to public--the text for that course was Algebra II: The Revenge) and finding optimization points through extrema (a little bit of pre-precalculus, I guess).

    The linear algebra would have been useful in my physics courses in Uni, had the Uni actually used any linear algebra (which shockingly, it didn't).

  130. A serious take on a ment-to-be-silly point by jonaskoelker · · Score: 1

    That's it! We'll make career plans a high school requirement!

    I think that's one of the least stupid education reform ideas I've heard in a long time.

    The problem with western-world school systems (I know because I've experienced one and they're all equal and actually I went to a private school) is that they're compulsory.

    One, that drains the motivation out of people. Many things which are fun or acceptable are a pain if they're forced (consider working and having sex). The best you can get out of people if you force their hand is begrudging compliance. That might work for factory labor, but not for intellectual development. At best you'll produce people who know a bundle of facts.

    Secondly, it preempts the time of young people. Time which should be spent setting and pursuing your own goals. I think it has been said a million times in a thousand ways, but here's my take---to achieve your goals, you must first set them. Schools are an institution which obstructs the process of setting goals for oneself, working towards them and reaching them. I bet you'd have more successful people if they were put into a habit, from their youth, of setting goals for themselves and working to reach them.

    You may worry about educational needs being met if kids are left to their own devices. Consider this: how come little kids ask a bajillion questions and are incredibly curious right up until the point when they're put into school?

    But regarding my parent's point: if people only enter high school with a career plan, you'll know that people have a goal and that high school is (at least perceived to be) on the path towards that goal. That will probably mean you'll have more motivated students---why would you be motivated to spend time doing something which doesn't give you anything you want?

  131. Re:Whoever created this test didn't take Algebra I by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The second question asks a student to represent (3i - 1) / (-2 - 4i) in the form a + bi. This is obviously impossible (hint: if you know nothing about math, simply try i = - 1/2 for the original formula and all the answers in the graphic). Not to mention that the answer to the 3rd question is also incorrect. Total score is 66% success for questions and 33% for answers. Neither is a pass.

    i = sqrt(-1)

    It's in the complex number system, and thus i (or j, for any electrical engineering folks out there ;) ) can't ever equal -1/2. On the other hand, I'm fairly certain that most algebra 2 doesn't go into complex numbers beyond saying that they exist. Dividing them as the above really didn't become useful until my sophomore digital signal processing class in college.

  132. Need Stats As Well by gadders · · Score: 1

    That way they won't confuse correlation with causation.

  133. It's a predictor because not everyone takes it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a predictor because not everyone takes it. Once everyone takes it, the "new predictor" will be Calculus, and then Qauntum Physics, and so on. Until only affluent white children can make it through the education system, then they will likely stop.

    Good 'ol Kansas, keeping the stereotypes alive. One idiotic decision at a time.

  134. Algebra II by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

    It was part of my grade 10 and grade 11 curriculum. What happened to schooling since I attended 55 years ago?

    --
    Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
  135. Algebra II = NO; Probability/Stats = YES by sydbarrett74 · · Score: 1

    For the high-school student not going into a STEM major, probability and statistics plus a course in financial literacy would be far more useful in terms of real-world applicability than an algebra II course.

    --
    'He who has to break a thing to find out what it is, has left the path of wisdom.' -- Gandalf to Saruman
  136. Umbrella manufacturers by Umbrella+supplier · · Score: 1

    Avon Lifestyle in the leading umbrella manufacturer in india,