All too often, math teachers sit in silent complicity when
it is said that math is exact and linear—humanities are not. Math is about
answers that are right and wrong—humanities are not. If math teachers don’t
interrupt the status quo, who will? Consider sharing this narrative from an
alternate universe:
In my humanities class,
I learn that there is only one correct way to spell a word—my teacher says that
spelling is not a matter of opinion. My teacher tells me to identify the word
in a sentence that is a pronoun—apparently there are words that are pronouns
and ones that aren’t. I am told that there are fragments and there are complete
sentences, and the difference is clear. If I am talking about a novel we have
read, I have to tell the facts in the exact order they happened. There are
rules for how you are supposed to use commas and apostrophes. I have to
capitalize some words and not others—as if that really makes a difference in being
Understood most of the Tiime. Those are the rules, I am told. People seem to
care that I know what capital city belongs to what country, and you can’t mix
those up! My teacher says that some books are too hard for us to read, and some
books are too easy for us, because you are supposed to read certain books at a
certain age—it’s developmental.
My math class is where
I really get to think. Here’s some of the stuff I have done;
--I made a poster explaining when it would
be best to say something was “one third” and when it would be best to say it
was 33%. It isn’t always clear when you should use decimals or fractions or
percents to describe a portion of something. My teacher says understanding how
to communicate a mathematical idea is so much about your audience and your
intentions.
--I had to look at baseball statistics about
shortstops and defend my reason why one of them was the best choice to get a 5
year contract. Wow, that was hard! My best friend and I had very different
opinions. My teacher gave us good grades for how well we prioritized the
different data. He said there was no one right answer, of course—just like real
life!
--My teacher put an equation on the board
and said there were a few ways to solve it. He wanted us to pick a way to solve
it that would be best if our life depended on getting it right, a method if we
wanted to have the most fun trying a wacky way, and a method that was the
quickest, even if it might sometimes cause you to make a careless error.
--He showed us a shape we had never seen
before. We had to experiment with rulers and protractors and calculators and
come up with the area—and then we had to come up with a formula we could
remember. I love when he says, “Try more experiments. That’s what math is
about.”
--My small group was given a big jar of
pennies. We had to come up with 5 different ways we could estimate the number
of pennies in the jar. He is giving the same problem to the kids in a class two
grades below mine and two grades above mine.
My math teacher says
humanities classes could be fun too, but mostly they are taught like math classes
that did only number-crunching right-and-wrong drills. He says humanities classes
could be filled with opinions, creative writing, lots of discussions, and using
evidence to back up our own theories. He even says there are people who have a love of literature the way we have a love of numeracy. Yeah, right.
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