For the past several years, America has been using its young people as lab rats in a sweeping, if not exactly thought-out, education experiment. Schools across the country have been lowering standards and removing penalties for failure. The results are coming into focus.

Five years ago, about 30 incoming freshmen at UC San Diego arrived with math skills below high-school level. Now, according to a recent report from UC San Diego faculty and administrators, that number is more than 900—and most of those students don’t fully meet middle-school math standards. Many students struggle with fractions and simple algebra problems. Last year, the university, which admits fewer than 30 percent of undergraduate applicants, launched a remedial-math course that focuses entirely on concepts taught in elementary and middle school. (According to the report, more than 60 percent of students who took the previous version of the course couldn’t divide a fraction by two.) One of the course’s tutors noted that students faced more issues with “logical thinking” than with math facts per se. They didn’t know how to begin solving word problems.

The university’s problems are extreme, but they are not unique. Over the past five years, all of the other University of California campuses, including UC Berkeley and UCLA, have seen the number of first-years who are unprepared for precalculus double or triple. George Mason University, in Virginia, revamped its remedial-math summer program in 2023 after students began arriving at their calculus course unable to do algebra, the math-department chair, Maria Emelianenko, told me.

  • verdare@piefed.blahaj.zone
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    3
    ·
    edit-2
    4 days ago

    Red flag citing No Child Left Behind as a positive policy decision. Not saying that the problem isn’t real, but that statement combined with the history of moral panics around education make me somewhat suspicious of the article’s purpose.

    • ranandtoldthat@beehaw.org
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      4 days ago

      Yeah. Students entering college in the last 5 years were in elementary during the disaster of NCLB. Common core didn’t recover us from that disaster entirely either. There are problems in education that need fixing. Sensationalist journalist Rose Horowitch is not going to be guiding us toward a solution.

      Overall, this article seems to either misunderstand or intentionally misrepresent a lot. Like they misrepresent/misunderstand what “no zeros” policies are. They don’t address the reasons so many schools stopped requiring SAT scores. Etc

      I didn’t dive too deep into the report in question.

      I definitely agree on being suspicious of the motives behind the article.