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Why is our math and science education so far behind eastern europe?


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2017 May 4, 6:40pm   15,115 views  84 comments

by CBOEtrader   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  

Spoke to a trader at a large derivatives firm today.

He told me they stopped hiring quants from American schools, since they consistently score lower on the initial aptitude tests and entry level training programs. Whereas the eastern european students come in better prepared and more willing to work.

The good news is we are hiring these people here... a bigger problem will occur if/when the jobs emigrate to eastern euro with the talent.

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45   MisdemeanorRebel   2017 May 5, 10:27am  

The lack of tying everything in to a big picture, with everything a la carte and taught in Isolation, is a major, major problem with schooling.

This isn't just Math, but also Science, History, you name it. You get taught seemingly unrelated packets of information, usually without context, and no big picture.

Math is a big one for "Why is this important? This is just goobleygook, guess i have to learn it anyway."

Or the laughable lies like "Trashmen need Algebra and Geometry" on a school chart I saw once. Even at 12 I knew that was pure BS.

46   marcus   2017 May 5, 10:30am  

casandra says

So why try to do a good job, just snatch your 100k a year pay check, go home with your golden benefits, and stroll off into a beautiful tax payer funded retirement.

Yes, of course this is how teachers think. They don't even like children, they have no illusions about serving or helping others, they're just killing time til they can get that pension. They find this is what makes them feel fulfilled as a person.

Obviously I'm not serious.

Interestingly this kind of talk is much more prevalent now than it was 40 years ago, when there was far far far far far less pressure on public school teachers.

47   marcus   2017 May 5, 10:39am  

FP says

This means that I do the teacher's job of teaching.

There are a lot of good parents that think that when they help their children learn that they are simply doing their job, not the teachers job.

But I get it, everything is in comparison to your experience as a child. You were in a different environment with highly motivated students closer to the same Math experience and aptitude level (relative to each other).

Newsflash: For a teacher that knows the Math - teaching in that situation is WAY easier than teaching say algebra one to a mixed group. And yes I'm speaking from experience of having done both.

Another thing you should realize. When your child gets up to the level of classes that aren't required for everyone (i.e. precalc and above), you are going to be less critical. That is unless your child is lacking abilities that you have and you need to blame the school.

About CPM, I have mixed feelings about it. I don't love teaching it. But I see some benefits. IT's definitely not traditional. They over do it a bit on the discovery. Although discovering something rather than just having it put out there is often valuable to the student, relative to learning how to learn. It's also problem solving oriented.

FP says

because a lot of the work (assignments and tests) is group work

Yes, I'm ambivalent on some of this type of thing, but I understand the intent. It's not easy to get students actually putting their understanding in to words. Ask students a good question, and most are likely to want to be passive and wait for someone else to answer (either one of the smartest students or the teacher). Have them figure it out, and learn to work together. I get it you didn't do that when you were coming up. Do you find that you're as good at working with others as you would like to be now ?

48   missing   2017 May 5, 12:04pm  

marcus says

Have them figure it out, and learn to work together. I get it you didn't do that when you were coming up. Do you find that you're as good at working with others as you would like to be now ?

Their difficulty is usually not working together but working alone. I am stating this as someone who has tough many years at a University and has supervised undergraduate and graduate students, and postdocs.

I think that I am better at what I do than many people aournd me thanks to my educational background.

49   missing   2017 May 5, 12:27pm  

marcus says

FP says

This means that I do the teacher's job of teaching.

There are a lot of good parents that think that when they help their children learn that they are simply doing their job, not the teachers job.

Please allow me to know what I am taking about.

Let me give a specific example.

Background: One of my kids is freshman taking honors algebra 2. They use CPM. Before that In middle school - straight A's, excellent teacher, I never had to help at home.

A few weeks ago the kid comes to me, almost in tears, and tells me that he has no clue how to solve the problems they are doing in class. They had been on this topic for two weeks, none of his classmates understands them, and the teacher is not explaining anything. The topic was plotting trigonometric functions (with amplitude, phase shift, etc).

I was on my way to the airport and had only 30 min to spend with him. This was sufficient for him to understand how to approach the problems, and I left him some excercise problems.

When I came back home the following week, I asked him how things in math are. The answe was: "Most students still don't have a clue. The few of us who understand the problems teach the rest."

So to summarize: a large fraction of the students in that class learned (barely!!!) the topic in question from my son, who learned it from me during a 30 min rushed session. They spent more than 3 weeks for this.

This example is not an isolated case. It is the norm.

50   CBOEtrader   2017 May 5, 12:34pm  

The founder of Khan academy has interesting take on this. He mentions Leonardo da vinci as an example of how to properly educate a genius. Unfortunately almost no-one has access to the top brains in the world of every topic available for 1 on 1 tutoring, like LDV had.

The fact that a teacher is forced to teach the class at the same pace sacrifices the potential of kids at both ends of the spectrum in favor of the average student. We are churning out armies of Office Space working zombies, not free thinking intellects.

51   CBOEtrader   2017 May 5, 12:35pm  

FP says

So to summarize: a large fraction of the students in that class learned (barely!!!) the topic in question from my son, who learned it from me during a 30 min rushed session. They spent more than 3 weeks for this.

It sounds like the teacher didn't understand the subject matter. That's really sad

52   CBOEtrader   2017 May 5, 12:36pm  

Why are you still sending your kid there? Put him on khan academy and curate his path at home.

53   marcus   2017 May 5, 12:38pm  

FP says

This example is not an isolated case. It is the norm.

If so, then it's a bad teacher. Small sample size though, and you're generalizing conclusions about what, all American Math teachers and CPM from this ?

About the trig, I like to show students two methods. The memorized method, that includes dividing 2pi by the coefficient of x in the argument of the sin or cos function to get the period. And look at the factored argument to get the horizontal shift. But it's also (especially if graphing) nice to take the argument (however complex an expression it might be), call it U and solve U = 0 and U = 2pi to get the starting and ending x coordinates of one sin(U) or cos(U) cycle of the sin or cos function you're graphing. Of course you still need to get the amplitude and vertical shift, but that's easier for students.

54   missing   2017 May 5, 12:39pm  

Now, Marcus, a few quick questions for you:

Tell me a good geometry textbook being used in the American schools.

Tell me a good algebra textbook?

How about a good physics textbook?

Before you go and ahead and point me to some 900 page doorstop, think about this - what are the criteria that a good textbook must satisfy? Hint: the Russian math pedagosists have already figured this out 100 years ago. But for anybody who has actually studied math (and physics) properly, this should be obvious.

55   marcus   2017 May 5, 12:48pm  

Yes, textbooks are a business and probably part of whats behind the whole "American Math teaching sucks" message is that it's perpetuated by publishers that are supposedly going to solve the curriculum problem.

I agree to a degree that there were great Math books in existence decades ago if not centuries ago.

Anyone interested in great little books on Algebra and Trigonometry to review (for adults) or to accompany your childs learning, these are great !

https://www.amazon.com/Algebra-Israel-M-Gelfand/dp/0817636773/ref=sr_1_sc_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1494013538&sr=1-1-spell&keywords=algebra%2C+gelfond

https://www.amazon.com/Trigonometry-I-M-Gelfand/dp/0817639144/ref=sr_1_sc_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1494013538&sr=1-2-spell&keywords=algebra%2C+gelfond

As for commercial books in wide use ?

Pearson has a lot of good books. One I know a lot of community colleges for intermediate algebra has an accompanying computer program called MyMathLab. But that's another conversation and points to the way things are going.

56   missing   2017 May 5, 12:48pm  

marcus says

If so, then it's a bad teacher. Small sample size though, and you're generalizing conclusions about what, all American Math teachers and CPM from this ?

I have talked with many people and students. All the teachers in the school are like this. It is not a case of a single bad techer. The CPM approach is intrinsicly faulty. Furthermore, there are no criteria or controls for evaluating how the teachers apply this method. It just allows them to hide their laziness behind CPM.

57   missing   2017 May 5, 12:51pm  

The books you gave links above are decent; I have them. But they are not used in the schools and are not really appropriate as main textbooks.

58   missing   2017 May 5, 1:07pm  

marcus says

About the trig,

And here's how I do it:

1. Plot cos(x) and sin(x)

2. Add a shift: cos(x) +a

3. Add an amplitude: Acos(x)

4. Now put 2 and 3 together.

5. Add a phase shift: cos(x+b)

6. Now put 4 and 5 together.

7. Add a frequency multiplier: cos(fx)

8. Now put everything.

9. Practice on your own: 10-20 examples with various combinations of a, A, b and f

10. Now complicate things even further, e.g. add an absolute value, or a sum of a trig function and a linear function, or make the argument non-linear.

It is points 10. and (to a leaser extend) 9. where you want the students confused, stuck for long time thinking and discovering. Not at points 1, 2, 3,..

59   Heraclitusstudent   2017 May 5, 1:07pm  

marcus says

You get what you pay for.

Except for American public education.

60   marcus   2017 May 5, 1:11pm  

FP says

The CPM approach is intrinsicly faulty.

This is your opinion. But if you can't acknowledge the positives that the the CPM method provides, then you aren't being honest. I get it, it's not the way you think it should be done. And you may even be right, that the best methods are in between what CPM does and the traditional approach. But if you can't acknowledge tohe good aspects of it, then I can't respect your opinion as anything more than emotion.

FP says

It just allows them to hide their laziness behind CPM.

Actually when first doing it, it's very hard to let go of being a control freak and letting the kids loose to explore and put things together on their own. I have difficulty with it becasue of how long it takes, and when I teach it, I combine with traditional and can't use their lessons all the time. Truth is I haven't taught CPM much, and I haven't done it well. But I find it WAY more difficult than traditional, so your laziness point doesn't hold up. Teachers find teachingthe CPM way VERY difficult.

The main thing you don't get is that the teachers do feel accountable, so it's very hard to let go with those collaborative student driven lessons. You really have know idea what drives the typical teacher.

61   MisdemeanorRebel   2017 May 5, 1:18pm  

I wish we would replace Geometry and Trig with Logic, which would be far more useful for most people (and society generally).

The best thing to do would be to Reform English spelling, so we save months of time wasted. Even phonics can only do so much: Through, Bough, Though, Tough, Cough. Clue, Blue, Due, Rue but Clew, Blew, Dew. Glue and True, yet Threw and Pew. And settle the French vs. Dutch spelling for profit (more letters=more lines=more profit) from the time of the English Civil War.

The Spanish did it by saying "Starting on X date, any petitions, filings, etc. to the Royal Court must use the new spelling or it will be rejected."

It's funny people flip out over the milisecond it takes to double tap the spacebar, but are opposed to reforming the spelling which would slash months of learning, and probably weeks off lifetime of writing.

62   missing   2017 May 5, 1:38pm  

CBOEtrader says

Why are you still sending your kid there? Put him on khan academy and curate his path at home.

What choice do I have? It's a top rated public school :) I didn't expect this based on our middle school experience.

Khan academy is good for explaining things but not for a complete education.

So I am going the home path way - math, physics and programming. I have ordered some soviet books from Mir publishing, some in English, some I'm translating. I'm also translating my old textbooks from midddle and high school (we had physics from 6th grade).

63   CBOEtrader   2017 May 5, 1:41pm  

FP says

marcus says

If so, then it's a bad teacher. Small sample size though, and you're generalizing conclusions about what, all American Math teachers and CPM from this ?

I have talked with many people and students. All the teachers in the school are like this. It is not a case of a single bad techer. The CPM approach is intrinsicly faulty. Furthermore, there are no criteria or controls for evaluating how the teachers apply this method. It just allows them to hide their laziness behind CPM.

Slow clap bro. W your dedication your son will certainly outpace his classmates. Test him against his Russian cousins and report back how the foreign students match up.

64   CBOEtrader   2017 May 5, 1:42pm  

Sorry in the sun and quoted wrong post above

65   missing   2017 May 5, 1:50pm  

marcus says

FP says

The CPM approach is intrinsicly faulty.

This is your opinion.

Not only my opinion.

1. It is the documented opinion of hundreds of educators - school and university. It is also the opinion of every single of my colleagues that I have discussed the matter with. These are theoretical physicists with degrees from Stanford, Berkeley, Princeton, MIT, Cornell, UIUC, Harvard and so on.

2. There is empirical evidence showing that CPM is inferior to the "traditional" approach.

3. There is no reliable, statistically significant evidence that CPM is better.

BTW, I never said there are no good aspect of CPM.

66   Entitlemented   2017 May 5, 1:52pm  

CBOEtrader says

It is not uncommon for an entire US PHD physics department to have 100% foreign educated grad students. These are the affluent who have the money to attain a superficial credential.

Physics, Medicine, Engineering are the prime value added careers that formed the best and most sustainable businesses in the US. The US started outsourcing, and the foreigners kept increasing their STEMM.

The US is exactly where we designed our self to be.

67   missing   2017 May 5, 1:55pm  

CBOEtrader says

Test him against his Russian cousins

I'm not Russian... neither Ukrainian, nor Belorussian.

68   FreeRound   2017 May 5, 1:56pm  

CBOEtrader says

bob2356 says

Quants are graduate level people usually PHD's.

You consistently assume you know more than you know. This will always lead you to poor conclusions.

Quants is a broad term. This conversation was regarding entry level quantitative developers. Most of these people have the equivalent of undergrad or masters programs. On eastern Europe I am told they often recruit from tech trade schools.

Then you should have been more specific. My conclusion is drawn from the fact that common usage for the term quants, of which my cousin is a very good quant with a double Phd, is for a quantum analyst. Which is a phd position.

Maybe you could fill us in on what company is doing this recruiting and what eastern european schools they are recruiting from and let us draw specific conclusions based on actual facts rather than a broad based pontification on the state of US education based on a vague someone said something about something that may mean something to someone.

69   FreeRound   2017 May 5, 2:11pm  

FP says

bob2356 says

So where are all the eastern european countries that are doing better at math and science? Estonia, which is northern europe and has a population less than San Jose, is the only one that scores higher in both subjects.

This type of rankings are not very telling for several reasons. I'll explain later when I have time.

Pray tell I'm always willing to learn. It's the rankings that are used. Good or bad, it's what is out there. The rankings show more about income inequality and national wealth than anything about teaching. Also the weighting of subjects matters a lot. Finland students scores higher on number properties than US students but lower in algebra which carries a much lower weighting in TMISS for example. Stanford did a big study on this I read a few years ago, but I'm not seeing it online to link to.

70   MisdemeanorRebel   2017 May 5, 2:19pm  

Translated Grade 4 (may not be equiv. to our Grade Four) Soviet Textbook.
ftp://math.stanford.edu/pub/papers/milgram/russian-grade-4-problems.pdf

Huge focus on the why and when to use Math, rather than "Just use the fucking formula" system I was taught.

71   marcus   2017 May 5, 2:19pm  

FP says

2. There is empirical evidence showing that CPM is inferior to the "traditional" approach.

Could you share some of your best sources for this please ?

I get it that People that came up with traditional find it annoying. I did too. And still do with parts of it.

So what is it you think they are trying to accomplish with it ?

72   MisdemeanorRebel   2017 May 5, 3:14pm  

@FP

You made me go down the Rabbit Hole... lots of Russian Math Classics here

http://www.cbspd.com/website/index.php/sciences/mathematics-and-statistics.html

73   marcus   2017 May 5, 6:20pm  

marcus says

FP says

It is points 10. and (to a leaser extend) 9. where you want the students confused, stuck for long time thinking and discovering. Not at points 1, 2, 3,..

True. But it was in an Algebra one class. Many don't even see the simplest right triangle trig until geometry. So is it so wrong to be exploring ? They will see more in trigonometry geometry, Algebra 2 and Precalc or trig.

What I was talking about in a paragraph above was graphing something like sin(3x + pi). Intentionally no altered amplitude or vertical shift.

Method one: it's sin(3(x+pi/3)) so the period is 2pi/3, and the horizontal shift is pi/3 to the left.

Method two: solve 3x + pi = 0, and 3x + pi = 2pi to get a starting point and end point for one full sin wave and graph the rest from there. Fool proof. Both methods assume an understanding of the function sin(x) .

74   markP   2017 May 5, 9:23pm  

Graduate in the US with a STEM degree as a US citizen, and the most likely outcome is that your application to STEM-related jobs that you actually want will be ignored. A few years later, even if industry does start hiring again, they'll write you off because you weren't able to find a job sooner.

Its a real vicious cycle. Lots of great US citizen talent is destroyed this way.

75   Patrick   2017 May 5, 9:25pm  

marcus says

I could not delete this comment. Invalid nonce.

Thanks for telling me. Will look into it.

76   theoakman   2017 May 6, 8:57am  

From my experience as a teacher, the biggest threat to education in the sciences is the removal of all desktops in the science lab and replacing them with chromebooks.

78   missing   2017 May 6, 10:15am  

Lashkar_i_Trumpi says

You made me go down the Rabbit Hole... lots of Russian Math Classics here

http://www.cbspd.com/website/index.php/sciences/mathematics-and-statistics.html

@Lashkar_i_Trumpi,

Thanks. I didn't know this site. Looks good. Only wished they were showing the contents + a few sample pages.

I you read Russian, check this out:
http://www.mccme.ru/

79   missing   2017 May 6, 10:31am  

StrictReason says

Are we really that bad in Math? If so, how come we are doing so well in International Mathematics Olympiad?

International Math Olympiads have very little to do with math education in general. Believe me, I have been there.

It is all about training a few motivated students. A large part of this training is classifying the type of problems that appear at the competitions and learning/memorizing approaches to solve them.

80   MisdemeanorRebel   2017 May 6, 11:20am  

We can save STEM. We just need more videos like this:

www.youtube.com/embed/46h-LfNWPn8

www.youtube.com/embed/Wllc5gSc-N8

If you don't like having bisexual orgies, you are backwards barbarian.

81   CBOEtrader   2017 May 6, 11:25am  

^^ I'd really like to see the conversation wherein a producer agreed to this idiocy.

I couldn't imagine a better parody of the insanity within today's regressive left.

82   Hircus   2017 May 7, 9:46am  

I've always felt our culture works against us. Math & science are strongly associated with being a nerd, which has negative connotations tied to it. Some people have enough self confidence to be proud & exclaim that they're a nerd, but most people feel it's a label they don't want attached to themselves, and so they avoid any behaviors that might lead to someone calling them one - and that means avoiding math, science, and sometimes just plain using your head.

How many times have you heard someone on TV disclaim themselves before doing a tiny bit of math? Like: "Hang tight folks, we're gonna get a little nerdy for a moment - $4 a day times 5 days a week times 52 weeks per year times 10 years = $10,400".

It's sad that someone ballpark-estimating how much they spend on Starbucks feels the need to disclaim themselves before they do some extremely basic math. Children pick up on these cues, and it affects them.

83   marcus   2017 May 7, 11:23am  

CBOEtrader says

^^ I'd really like to see the conversation wherein a producer agreed to this idiocy.

I couldn't imagine a better parody of the insanity within today's regressive left.

The thing is 90% of the people cringe, including liberals. So it's self correcting. We're not going to follow Canada's bill c-16.

84   marcus   2017 May 7, 11:30am  

goat says

I've always felt our culture works against us. Math & science are strongly associated with being a nerd

You have a point. But in public schools with enough academic diversity, that is with a high enough population of academically strong college bound students, many of the most respected cool kids are nerds. So you don't have that phenomenon.

But in low income and "inner city" areas, where too many kids are behind grade level, and long since not buying in to education as the best way out of poverty (parents not buying it either - in part because they are uneducated and think it's harder than it is (psychologically more complicated than that)), they don't have a critical mass of higher performing kids setting an example for the others.

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