“Everybody knows what college algebra is!” This was said by a math chair from a university in my state, as we worked though our state’s new transfer requirement for mathematics. Of course, he was wrong … though he has a lot of company. Today’s main question is this: Is college algebra a subset of pre-calculus?
The original college algebra course developed in the 19th century at the universities of the day (Harvard, Yale, Bowdain, etc), with a focus on meeting a math requirement for their degree. Of course, those times were very different … the Yale Catalog listed every student, and every student had the same default schedule. College algebra was everybody’s math course as a freshman; those ‘desiring’ calculus took it as a Junior. See http://elischolar.library.yale.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1069&context=yale_catalogue
That tradition carries forward to the present day, in the work of the MAA. The MAA College Algebra guidelines remain a narrative for a general education class, not a pre-calculus course. See http://www.maa.org/sites/default/files/pdf/CUPM/crafty/CRAFTY-Coll-Alg-Guidelines.pdf
The use of the name ‘college algebra’ for a calculus prerequisite appears to be a regional variation. In states use ‘college algebra’ as a prerequisite for pre-calculus; other states use college algebra as the first semester of pre-calculus … or as their one-semester pre-calculus (as in “college algebra and trig”).
Our situation has become illogical and disfunctional.
When publishers market their textbooks, sometimes the key difference between college algebra and pre-calculus is this: pre-calc emphasizes a unit circle for trig functions, while college algebra uses right triangles. Other than that, the pre-calculus book has more complicated problems, but no substantive differences. Both courses trace their ancestry back to the 19th century mathematics course later known as ‘college algebra’. [Search for Jeff Suzuki’s talk on college algebra.]
Neither course is really pre-calculus.
Of course, I don’t mean “students can not take these prior to calculus”; they do, though the benefits are small and accidental. A pre-calculus course would be designed to prepare students for the work of a calculus course. We make the fatal mistake of equating the ability to solve complicated symbolic problems with the capacity to reason with those objects.
A good preparation for calculus begins much earlier for many students. “Developmental” mathematics is being re-formed to focus on understanding and reasoning, with a de-emphasis on artificially complex symbolic work. A mathematical literacy course is a better preparation for calculus than the traditional algebra course.
More importantly, Algebraic Literacy is where we can begin the serious work of preparation for calculus. Intermediate algebra is a documented failure as preparation for college mathematics; algebraic literacy is designed deliberately for these purposes. The Algebraic Literacy course has learning outcomes backward-designed to meet the needs of calculus preparation … to be followed by a well-designed course at the next level which completes that preparation.
Here are some conditions necessary for good calculus preparation, based on the available information:
- diversity of content (algebra, geometry, trig as minimum)
- non-trivial reasoning about mathematical objects
- concrete (context) and abstract situations
- properties of functions, and relationships between types
- reasoning and visualization involving related quantities (2, 3, or 4 at a time)
- procedural expertise and flexibility
I do not intend for this list to be exhaustive. The intent is to focus on key outcomes so we can determine when we have a real pre-calculus experience that will work for our students. It is my belief that the great majority (>99%) of our current courses used as a calculus prerequisite are not reasonable preparations for the demands of such a course.
Some of our colleagues are beginning the work of correcting the curriculum; we need to support that work when possible. If you’d like to explore what the new curriculum would look like, the Algebraic Literacy course provides a good starting point; I’ll be doing a session at the AMATYC conference (Nov 21, 11:55am) in New Orleans.
We can solve this problem, together.
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