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Wendigo's avatar

"One of the ideas underpinning the California Math Framework is the notion that math needs to be “detracked”—instead of allowing some students to take Algebra I in 8th grade, it would require all students to enroll in the same math curriculum until the 9th grade."

This is the single most utterly moronic proposal I have ever seen in all the annals of education reform.

I went to a small, fairly traditional K-8 private school. No fancy technology or trend-chasing pedagogy, but relentlessly back-to-basics, serious education. Our entire reading education was phonics for instance, and this was in the early-mid 2000s when I am under the impression that the war on phonics had made significant gains. Each grade had two math tracks, with the upper track one year ahead of the lower track. From Kindergarten on, I and a couple other kids were tracked *two* levels ahead, meaning I took the math classes of the upper track in the grade above. What this meant was that I took Algebra 1 in 7th grade. In 8th grade I arrived at school 40 minutes early to take Geometry one-on-one with one of the 8th grade math teachers (the other few 2-track-up kids had dropped down to regular upper-track by then).

This was an immense benefit to me, and meant I was able to take Calc BC in 11th grade, allowing room for one more STEM elective in 12th grade. The idea of having to stick 2 grade levels below what I did is just horrifying. Not only in terms of boredom and lack of challenge, but also the impact on the other kids. I was already hyperactive enough in the classroom as is. Me in 8th grade in a pre-algebra class would have been a total shitshow.

I know this is a bit long-winded and ranty, but there are few things that make me seethe with incandescent rage as much as this new trend of forcing everyone to operate at the very lowest level for the sake of "equity". Let's be real about what "equity" is: kneecapping the best and brightest so that the worst and least competent can feel better about themselves and useless bureaucrats can pat themselves on the back. It's this absolutely poisonous idea that because some people are incapable of achieving something, nobody at all should allowed to achieve it for themselves. Literal kindergarten playground mentality. Frankly, even in the counterfactual world where detracking *did* reduce racial gaps, I wouldn't care.

Keep the law of Jante over in Scandinavia please. I don't want it here.

And ed school PhD programs frankly seem more like a massive grift the more I read about them. Is there any evidence to the contrary? If so, I'd love to see it. My impression is basically they're a giant factory of breaking things that ain't broke. The war on phonics being the most obvious example.

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Steve Pehrson's avatar

I’m a California high school physics teacher and this just freaks me out. My district recently moved physics from 3rd to 2nd year and I already have a majority of students incapable of handling the simplified math we are allowed to include according to the Next Gen Science Standards. Math skills took the biggest hit in the pandemic, and I’ve been holding my breath for a return to normalcy that I do not see happening. I agree that this new framework is mostly just giving up on math.

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