Advocates for Math Equity Question Whether Being Right is Sometimes Wrong


To learn the geometric concept of transformations this year, Crystal Watson’s eighth-graders drew up blueprints of apartments. As they worked, she asked them to imagine designing affordable housing for Black and Hispanic families like theirs in Cincinnati who have been priced out of their neighborhoods.



But when she had them add a hallway down the middle of their floor plans, with apartments on either side, some struggled with the idea of reflection — flipping a figure to create a mirror image.

“There are still kids who mix up their x and y axis,” said Watson, who teaches at Hartwell School.

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Crystal Watson’s students created apartment blueprints to learn about transformation in geometry. (Crystal Watson)

At that point, she pulled students aside individually to explain the difference and offered tips for remembering. Her strategy — connecting math to socio-economic issues in the community and letting students proceed even if they haven’t mastered the skills — is captured in a workbook that gives teachers steps for “dismantling racism” in math instruction.

But the book’s claim that a focus on producing the right answer promotes “white supremacy culture” alarmed some who question how inaccuracy in math could benefit students. And, partly in response to the controversy, California state board members recently recommended against incorporating the resource into a redesign of the state’s math program.


While history and literature seem like obvious battlegrounds for schools to address the effects of racial discrimination, some might question whether math — where achievement depends on precise calculations — is the appropriate venue for such fights. Those devoted to greater equity say the middle grades are a period when many Black and Hispanic students begin to turn off of math, only to continue struggling through high school. But the suggestion that answers to math problems are subjective became easy fodder for culture war conservatives.

“Math enjoyed this notion that it was somehow above the influence of the cultural and political issues of our time,” said Rachel Ruffalo, the director of educator engagement at The Education Trust-West, the Oakland-based advocacy group that created the workbook.

Now, that is changing. The workbook is part of the organization’s larger math equity project — one that seeks to address persistent racial disparities in achievement. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation funded the $1 million initiative last spring as part of a grant program focused on making algebra more accessible to students of color, partly in response to learning disruptions caused by the pandemic. Districts in Georgia, Ohio and California are among those using the workbook in teacher training.


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Erec Smith (Free Black Thought)

Conservative Fox News lampooned, sometimes out of context, a handful of the book’s ideas — for example, the notion that key teaching practices such as requiring students to show their work and complete assignments individually are based in racism. The article appeared in mid-February after the Oregon Department of Education invited teachers to a training featuring the book. The Fox piece sparked coverage in other outlets and reactions from columnists, most of whom neglected to mention that the authors later say, “Of course, most math problems have correct answers.”

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David Barnes (Courtesy of David Barnes)

Erec Smith, a professor of rhetoric and composition at York College of Pennsylvania and co-founder of Free Black Thought, is among those who accuse the book’s authors of their own form of bigotry.

“The workbook’s ultimate message is clear: Black kids are bad at math, so why don’t we just excuse them from really learning it,” said Smith, who is Black.

Even leaders of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics have reservations about the guide — though their reasons differ.

“Are we building bridges or throwing grenades?” asked David Barnes, associate executive director of the council. “When you get to page two and what’s bolded is ‘dismantling white supremacy,’ there are some people that cannot read past that.”

Other groups came to Oregon’s defense, offering positive reactions to the book and its broader effort to make math more culturally relevant for students of color.

“You and I were taught that everything happened in Greece,” said Kristopher Childs, director of Student Achievement Partners, a nonprofit focusing on academic success for historically underserved students. “Every culture and civilization contributed to mathematics. Students need to know that.”

The authors, for example, prompt teachers to have students explore the Egyptian and Babylonian roots of the Pythagorean Theorem, before Pythagoras identified it in Greece during the 6th century B.C.

The guide draws inspiration from another document titled “Dismantling Racism,” which includes what some scholars on race argue are characteristics of “white supremacy culture” — ideals such as perfectionism, individualism and a sense of urgency they say allowed early American colonists to dominate over African slaves and Native Americans.

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Crystal Watson, a math teacher in Cincinnati, is drawing inspiration from a controversial guide about how to be an “antiracist math educator.” (Courtesy of Crystal Watson)

‘Room for creativity’​

Samuel Rhodes, an assistant professor of elementary math education at Georgia Southern University, said focusing only on the right answer can at times be counterproductive. In a course last year for future K-8 teachers, he called on a student who gave a wrong answer to a problem.

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Samuel Rhodes at Georgia Southern University teaches future K-8 math teachers. (Samuel Rhodes)

He said he could have done what he’s observed in countless public school classrooms — go on to the next student until someone answered correctly, or repeat the steps.

But with that strategy, a “student … just immediately shuts down,” Rhodes said. “Now they have to ignore everything they were thinking with the goal of trying to understand how the other students did it.”

Instead, he asked the student how she arrived at that answer and learned she had a “creative, brilliant process” for finding the solution, but got derailed by a small computation mistake.

“There’s no room for creativity when there is a fixation on the answer,” he said.

But knowing whether a student is “wildly wrong” or “off by just a hair” takes deep expertise in math — something teachers, especially those at the elementary level — don’t always have, said Jay Wamsted, a longtime Atlanta math teacher working in high schools serving predominantly Black and HIspanic students.

He added, “It’s not obvious to the layperson why ‘the right answer’ isn’t always preferable and the workbook needs to be clear about why that is.”

While the workbook discourages teachers from asking students to “’show their work’ in … prescribed ways,” it does recommend that students have multiple options for demonstrating what they understand.

That’s a shift Lisa Owens, another Cincinnati math teacher, is still trying to make.

“For me, that was letting go of control. For a lot of teachers, that is where the issue is,” said Owens. But she said she’s learned to spot shallow attempts at cultural relevance. “You can’t just put an ethnic name into a word problem.”

Beginning her career in a Chicago suburb, she said she “was raised that you don’t see color.” But now Owens, who is white, teaches at Roberts Academy, which serves a predominantly Black and Hispanic population. She helped start a school equity coalition and opposed the school’s former practice of tracking fourth graders into low and high classes based on math scores.

She recognizes the hurdles involved in meeting the guide’s definition of an “antiracist math educator.” Allowing students to arrive at mistakes on their own can take up valuable class time, and a lot of teachers, she said, still take a “tough love” approach and question whether such methods would improve test scores. According to state data, less than 10 percent of the eighth graders in the school score proficient in math.

‘The role of education’​

Teaching practices like those in the workbook have been part of the San Francisco Unified School District’s shift in math instruction since 2014. That’s when the district stopped separating students into basic or Algebra I classes in middle school — a controversial policy that California is now considering statewide. The state will continue to collect public comments over the summer, and the state board will make a final decision in November. Advocates for gifted students are against the proposed changes.

So far, administrators using the workbook have had a receptive audience of educators committed to “social justice math.” But when they try to spread those ideas among colleagues at their schools, they often face resistance.

“Challenging the status quo is not easy for a lot of teachers,” said Bernadette Andres-Salgarino, math coordinator for the Santa Clara County Office of Education in California.

The guide caused enough of a storm in California that members of the state board advised its Instructional Quality Commission, which is drafting the new math “framework,” to remove references to it.

While Barnes, with the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, thought the guide used “words that immediately divide,” he appreciates the intent behind it — an effort to make math more accessible for students of color and give them a strong foundation when they enter high school.

It complements, he said, the push in California and Oregon to de-track math by keeping students in the same courses at least through the eighth grade. Virginia is considering similar changes.

Data shows less than 20 percent of Black students take Algebra 1 by eighth grade, compared to 67 percent of Asian students and 45 percent of white students. And even if they take higher-level math in middle school, Black students are less likely than white and Asian students to stay on an accelerated track in high school.

The pandemic has set students of color even further behind. Winter assessment data from testing provider Renaissance showed that while all students performed below pre-pandemic levels in math, the decline was greatest among Black and Hispanic students. And on a national scale, the gap in math between Black and white eighth-graders hasn’t budged in years.

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(Williamson Evers Independent Institute)

Williamson Evers, a former U.S. Department of Education official during the second Bush administration and a senior fellow at the conservative Independent Institute, suggested the social justice approach to math will put U.S. students further behind those in other countries.

“Our kids are going to be competing in a world with kids that have this in their heads. They’re doing better. They have the material under their belt,” he said during a recent podcast. His commentary in the Wall Street Journal ran before California state board members turned their back on the workbook.

Josie McSpadden, a spokeswoman at the Gates Foundation, defended the project.

“At times, research has shown that racial bias and student mindsets can affect student academic achievement,” she said, adding the workbook, “highlights a critical discussion — how students arrive at answers and demonstrate their understanding and conceptual grasp of important math concepts.”

This fall in Cincinnati, math teachers throughout the district will walk through the practices recommended in the guide. Watson — who plays clean versions of rap songs in her class when students finish an assessment — said math is usually “so cut and dried.” The resource gives teachers ways to incorporate students’ opinions and family stories into her lessons.

“I don’t have to be an anti-racism and anti-bias guru,” she said, “to pick this up and do what’s good for kids.”

Disclosure: The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation provides financial support to The Education Trust-West and The 74.
 

To learn the geometric concept of transformations this year, Crystal Watson’s eighth-graders drew up blueprints of apartments. As they worked, she asked them to imagine designing affordable housing for Black and Hispanic families like theirs in Cincinnati who have been priced out of their neighborhoods.
I'm not surprised the Gates are involved, everything they touch goes to shit. Also there's a bit of local politics, they had an "affordable" housing thing on the ballot a couple months back here in Cinci. 50 million a year our of a city budget of 800 million for "affordable" housing, which was hilarious blown out of the water. I don't think it even got a 1/3 of the vote in support. The reason they've been priced out of their neighborhoods is there's left-leaning hipster fags rolling in and gentrifying some of the older neighborhoods.

Also yes, problems mirroring at 8th grade, yes they are that tarded in the city. Also, Ohio tends to be at the forefront of whatever stupid educational fads are all the rage among the two-digit IQ education majors. Not sure why, but Ohio state and local politics are a mix between complete corruption, surprisingly based, and shockingly retarded. We had Kasich as governor and Cinci once elected Jerry Springer as mayor.
 
The only excuse for mixing your axes up is that for some reason some CAD and 3d modeling programs use Z for height instead of Y.
I've seen retail boxes and websites screw up the order of dimensions, but never expected stuff like that to do it. School kinda beat X, Y, Z (H, V, D) into my brain; now to have some professional grade tech fuck that up... come on guys...
 
I've seen retail boxes and websites screw up the order of dimensions, but never expected stuff like that to do it. School kinda beat X, Y, Z (H, V, D) into my brain; now to have some professional grade tech fuck that up... come on guys...
No, wait, I fucked up. I was thinking in terms of planes. the actual axis markers are correct.
 
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What can men do against such flagrant retardation? We are dealing with a cult that will eviscerate the idea of reality itself on the altar of anti-racism.
Huh, what a shame Logitech's marketing is such shit. I actually like this mouse of theirs, fits nicely, but I'm guessing we're gonna have some abstract Picasso tier shit in the future judging from the article.
Get rid of common core math. Problem = solved
It's hilarious that these same people advocate for common core when it deliberately punishes you for thinking outside the box; because if it's not how to solve it in the book then the teacher is gonna grade it as wrong. Doesn't matter if you reached the same answer, doesn't matter if your work checks out, if it's not exactly as it says in the textbook you're wrong. That's how common core works now. Maybe it didn't before, but that's what teachers seem to be doing now. It's absurd.
 
Someone didn't drill into the kid's heads that the order is X, then Y (and maybe Z, not that they'll get that far) for Horizontal (left-right), then Veritcal (up-down). How did you get to Geometry class and not get this in your head (rhetorical question, I know the answer).


And nor should they. But if black people want to dismantle the history of what made the modern day so fucking convenient; they they can go back to riding donkeys, drinking cow piss, and worshipping mad Ocelot Gods.

As an aside; University level black students, wanting to decolonize their mind, so they can throw lightning bolts... like their ancestors did... or some shit. I don't know, niggers are weird.



I look forward to the deaths via Lithium fires thanks to the feds wanting everyone to be in an 100% electrical vehicle. Humanity may finally be able to surpass the Ford Pinto.
I fucking love the popularization of teaching dumb people 'magic is real'
 
Even monkeys can recognize themselves in a mirror, but apparently not these kids.
 
affordable housing for Black and Hispanic families
images (1) (12).jpeg
 
I'm starting to wonder if this shit isn't intentionally designed to make niggers even stupider so they keep voting Democrat.
Oh hell yeah. Why did they go after Bill Cosby so hard before finally being able to nail him for some roofies decades ago? Why do they glorify criminals and criminal-adjuncts?

Because the establishment doesn't like black people that were successful, well-liked, and made money. If they did, kids would learn about people like Lonnie Johnson in school, who invented Nerf darts and Super Soakers, both very important in my formative years.
 
As they worked, she asked them to imagine designing affordable housing for Black and Hispanic families like theirs...
With teachers this racist rubbing it in their faces, who needs bullies?
:story:

Also loving the "right and wrong are subjective things that people shouldn't be so quick to jump on... except for my beliefs; those are infallibly right and unequivocally accurate." vibe in this article.
 
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