The Quick Fix This issue does not make the claim that the New New Math is entirely without merit. It stems from a series of worthy impulses: certainly students should have some fundamental understanding of what they are doing, certainly it is helpful for teachers to illustrate their lessons with examples from the real world, certainly students should learn from their peers. This issue does, however, argue that the New New Math fuzzy math and ethnomathematics is too absolute in its rejection of traditional rubrics for teaching math. The political impulse behind the New New Math claims that there is little relevant objective reality to numbers, and so the right answer is practically worthless. This is going too far; it means, as the plummeting test scores of school districts employing New New Math curricula have shown, that students simply don't learn Math.
-- Benjamin Wallace-Wells |