Here’s an idea that will appeal to every teacher who has had students who can’t sit still (read: every teacher): Stand-up desks.
“As part of a small but growing movement in northern Wisconsin and Minnesota that many teachers say is bound to gain popularity elsewhere, several schools are experimenting with their physical learning environments by incorporating stand-up workstations in the classroom, or, in one school, stability balls instead of traditional school desk chairs,” the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports.
Kids who are habitually fidgety or who suffer from attention disorders appear to show the most improvement, teachers tell the paper. Richard Whitmire predicts a rush on orders for the desks.
“If we want kids to master algebra by eighth, we need to focus at least as much energy on getting them proficient in whole number operations by fourth,” writes the New America Foundation’s Sara Mead, commenting on today’s Brookings report. “That’s a lot harder than simply mandating algebra for all eighth graders, but in the long term the results will be much better.”
Just so.
Asked which candidate they would want as their child’s teacher, Barack Obama beats John McCain 55 to 44 percent in an Associated Press-Yahoo News poll. They’d also rather watch a football game with Obama, but by a slimmer margin, 50 to 47 percent.
Interestingly four U.S. Presidents spent at least part of their careers as school teachers: Adams, Garfield, Arthur and Lyndon Johnson.
Twenty years ago, only one in six U.S. 8th graders studied algebra. Thanks to a national push dating back to the Clinton administration, today more of them take algebra than any other math course. Take it, yes. But are they learning it?
A new report from the Brookings Institution’s Tom Loveless notes many students are being pushed into algebra without having mastered basic skills such as multiplication, division and fractions. Among the poorest math students, nearly one in three were taking advanced math. As Loveless’ report, “The Misplaced Math Student: Lost in Eighth Grade Algebra,” notes:
These students tend to be some of the nation’s most vulnerable children. We already know that they struggle at mathematics, scoring among the bottom 10 percent of all eighth graders in the country. They also possess characteristics that make recovery from a lost year of math instruction unlikely.
The push to make algebra universal was about increasing educational equity. ”It’s really counterfeit equity,” Loveless tells USA Today, noting that the mismatch inordinately affects black, Hispanic and poor kids in urban schools.
The Washington Post’s Jay Mathews, a booster of 8th grade algebra for all, says the Brookings report is giving him second thoughts. “It would be better to think of algebra as we do swimming,” he writes. “Something everyone should learn, but most importantly learn well. Get everyone into the pool as soon as possible. But let’s not mark them as having passed the course until we are sure they can swim several lengths without drowning.”
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