Rotman’s Race to the Top

A few year’s ago, Paul Lockhart wrote an essay entitled “A Mathematician’s Lament”, sometimes known as “Lockhart’s Lament”.  I find this essay to be incredibly inspiring.

If you have not read it, here is a copy: lockhartslament

As far as I know, Lockhart never published this essay. I actually know very little about Paul Lockhart, besides the information that he went to teaching in a K-12 school after being a university professor for a time.  Some brief bio stuff is at http://www.maa.org/devlin/devlin_03_08.html

Okay, back to the essay.  Paul Lockhart is presenting a vision of mathematics as an art, not as a science, where learning is very personal and where inspiration is a basic component.  A fundamental process in Lockhart’s vision is the personal need to understand ideas, often ideas separate from reality.  The ‘lament’ aspect of the title for the article refers to the view that school mathematics has made mathematics into ‘paint by numbers’ instead of an exciting personal adventure.  Where we might focus on insight and creativity, we instead deliver an assembly line where students receive upgrade modules to their skill sets; Lockhart presents the view that these skill sets have nothing to do with mathematics.

I have two reasons for highly appreciating this essay.  First of all, people often assume that I believe that mathematics should be presented in contexts that students can relate to (probably because I advocate for “appropriate mathematics”).  Contexts are fun, and we can develop mathematics from context.  However, contexts tend to hide mathematics because they are so complicated; mathematics is an attempt to simplify measurement of reality, so complications are ‘the wrong direction’.  When I speak about appropriate mathematics, I am describing basic mathematical concepts and relationships which reflect an uncluttered view of mathematics; applicability might be now, might be later … or may never come for a given student.  Education is not about situations that students can understand at the time; education is about building the capacities to understand more situations in the future.

The second reason for appreciating Lockhart’s Lament is the immediate usefulness in teaching.  If we believe that students want to understand, then we can engage them with us in exploring ideas and reaching a deeper understanding.  Here is an example … in my intermediate algebra class this week, we introduced complex numbers starting with the ‘imaginary unit’.  Often, we would start this by pointing out that ‘the square root of a negative number is not a real number’ and then saying “the imaginary unit i resolves this problem.”

Think about this way of developing the idea instead (and it worked beautifully in class). 

  1. Squaring any real number results in a positive … double check student’s understanding (because quite a few believe that this is not true).
  2. The real numbers constitute the real number line, where squaring a number results in a positive.
  3. Think of (‘imagine”) a different number line where squaring a number results in a negative.  Perhaps this line is perpendicular to the real number line.
  4. We need to tell which number line a given number is on; how about ‘i‘ to label the number?
  5. Let’s square an imaginary number and it’s opposite (like 2i and -2i).
  6. Squaring an imaginary number produces ; since the imaginary numbers are those we square to get a negative, must be -1

Any context involving imaginary or complex numbers is well beyond anything my students would understand.  I would always want to explore imaginary numbers; first, it provides a situation to further understand real numbers … second, the reasoning behind imaginary numbers is accessible to pretty much all students.

You might be wondering why I gave this post the title “Rotman’s Race to the Top”.  One reason is just not very important … I wanted a alliteration comparable to “Lockhart’s Lament”; well, I tried :).  The important reason is this:  The “Race to the Top” process is based on  some questionable components that do not connect directly with the learning process (common standards [a redundant phrase], standardized testing, and outcomes.  The world we live in, as teachers of mathematics, is a personal one: We interact with our students, we create situations that encourage learning, and we want our students to value learning for its own sake.  We also want our students to understand some mathematics.  Inspiration and reasoning have a lot more to do with this environment than any law or governmental policy.

Rotman’s Race to the Top is the process of teachers showing our enthusiasm, modeling the excitement of understanding ideas, and helping each student reach a higher level of functioning.  Building capacity and a maintaining a love for learning are our goals.  Rotman’s Race to the Top is about our students and their future.

Will you join this Race to the Top?

 
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