US 'Algebra for none' fails in San Francisco - The goal was equity. The result: Meh.


1681755542055.png


Frustrated by high failure rates in eighth-grade algebra, San Francisco Unified decided in 2015 to delay algebra till ninth grade and place low, average and high achievers in the same classes. The goal was to improve achievement for black and Hispanic students, preparing more for advanced math.

That didn't happen, concludes a study by a team of Stanford professors. "Large ethnoracial gaps in advanced math course-taking . . . did not change." Black students aren't more likely to enroll in AP math; Hispanic enrollment increased by 1 percentage point. Overall, there was no change in the number of students receiving credit for advanced math classes, or the number taking math in 12th grade.

A proposed new California math framework encourages other districts to copy San Francisco's math reforms, for which the district claimed success, writes Sarah Schwartz in Education Week.

Math reformer Jo Boaler, a Stanford education professor and advocate of the new framework, co-authored a commentary, How one city got math right, in the Hechinger Report.

Test data from 2015 to 2019 shows that racial "achievement gaps have widened," wrote Tom Loveless last year. The district "is headed in the wrong direction on equity." Black and Hispanic 11th-graders in San Francisco earned "appalling" scores on the state math test, "about the same as or lower than the typical fifth-grader" in the state.

The district had bragged that algebra failure rates had dropped. Families for San Francisco, a parent group, analyzed the data: Failure rates dropped after the district dropped the end-of-course exam.

"Algebra for none" made it harder for achievers to succeed without helping low achievers, writes Fordham's Jeanette Luna. Families face a "nightmare of workarounds" to get their high-achieving children on track for advanced math, write Rex Ridgeway and David Margulies in a San Francisco Examiner commentary.

"Families with resources turn to fee-required online algebra 1 courses in eighth grade, outside the public school system, or enroll their kids in private schools," they write. Those who can't afford it must take a compression class that combines advanced algebra and pre-calculus or take a year of double math to get on track for AP Calculus.

The district "will take credit for my granddaughter’s mathematical success as proof their policies work," one of the authors writes. "In reality, this took two of her summers and nearly $2,000." A group of parents have filed a lawsuit against San Francisco Unified charging the math policy violates state law by denying access to advanced math to disadvantaged students, reports Allyson Aleksey in the San Francisco Examiner.

SFUSD “kids with privilege can advance in mathematics, and those without privilege cannot advance," said lead petitioner Annesa Flentje. "Ironically, SFUSD made these changes in the name of equity, but putting in barriers to accessing (advanced courses) is not equitable. . . . those with privilege are opting into private school.”

On Feb. 6, Judge Carrie Zepeda ruled in favor of Palo Alto parents who brought a similar lawsuit.




...Why would huwite supremacy do this?!
 
“kids with privilege can advance in mathematics, and those without privilege cannot advance," said lead petitioner Annesa Flentje.
I feel super bad for her kids if she has any. How defeatist can you get?

Money also does not make grades. Hard work does and we all know the people pushing this garbage do not really want to work.
 
Money also does not make grades. Hard work does and we all know the people pushing this garbage do not really want to work.
I will defend her on one point. Money does help people who struggle to learn. The extra tutoring, summer classes, and certified math programs that these people are spending money on is so that their children are prepared to take advanced courses. None of those are available without the cash, time, or resources to access them.
 
Black and Hispanic 11th-graders in San Francisco earned "appalling" scores on the state math test, "about the same as or lower than the typical fifth-grader" in the state.

So for every 11th grader who tested at 7th grade level, there was another one who tested at 3rd grade level?

Jesus.

I don't understand why teachers are so reluctant to hold kids back because passing someone who struggles with one-digit multiplication is a pathetic look for the city schools.
 
I will defend her on one point. Money does help people who struggle to learn. The extra tutoring, summer classes, and certified math programs that these people are spending money on is so that their children are prepared to take advanced courses. None of those are available without the cash, time, or resources to access them.
I agree that money can help a lot, but in current year if you have any amount of access to internet, you have a vast amount of free resources that you can use to better yourself. Even without piracy there are full, free textbooks you can download and work through.
 
I agree that money can help a lot, but in current year if you have any amount of access to internet, you have a vast amount of free resources that you can use to better yourself. Even without piracy there are full, free textbooks you can download and work through.
Or just spend an few hours reading the math articles on Wikipedia. I mean, all it really takes is getting an library card and you have an hour or two of free internet to the library... Or just read an few books while you're there.

Although, considering what this article is about; I doubt if these kids are willing to learn much of anything until it's too late
 
What was it Biden said that one time? "Poor kids are just as smart as white kids"?

That nigger needs to go to West Virginia and see the poor white kids. They don't have what the niggers do in say Baltimore. No access to services. Living without power or water.

I used to live there and on my road it was McMasions and run down trailers, then the occcasional normal house like mine.

They ain't got shit, but they have guns, and you don't see them killing each other everyday.
 
Or just spend an few hours reading the math articles on Wikipedia
I agree but you also have to keep in mind that kids who struggle in math usually struggle very much with stuff like that. There's no one size fits all but stuff like Khan Academy and OpenStax are geared towards people at their level and very tard friendly, it just takes actually sitting down and doing the work.

Perhaps I am too gracious but I believe most people, especially kids, who are "bad at math" never bothered to try to learn. Nowadays there's no excuse except laziness or genuine stupidity.
 
Back