Trains the mind in the significance, functions and manipulation of numbers, of quantitative relationships and proportions.carrying out arithmetical or algebraic procedures — Tarskian
It's not the memorizing that matters; it's the understanding of how they were derived and why they are valid.memorizing proofs — Tarskian
Trains the mind in the significance, functions and manipulation of numbers, of quantitative relationships and proportions. — Vera Mont
In the philosophy of mathematics, formalism is the view that holds that statements of mathematics and logic can be considered to be statements about the consequences of the manipulation of strings (alphanumeric sequences of symbols, usually as equations) using established manipulation rules. A central idea of formalism "is that mathematics is not a body of propositions representing an abstract sector of reality.
According to formalism, the truths expressed in logic and mathematics are not about numbers, sets, or triangles or any other coextensive subject matter — in fact, they aren't "about" anything at all. — Mathematical formalism
It's not the memorizing that matters; it's the understanding of how they were derived and why they are valid. — Vera Mont
While everyone needs arithmetic to navigate life successfully, few people need mathematics. But they won't know who they are until after they're introduced to the concepts. — Vera Mont
Therefore, every secondary school students should be given a basic education in maths and science. — Vera Mont
Okay. Let's dispense with education altogether and puts kids right to work on real-life problems as soon as they turn six. — Vera Mont
Okay. Let's dispense with education altogether. On their sixth birthday, give every child a laptop and put them to work on real life problems. — Vera Mont
there's been a shift towards conceptually understanding of math concepts, instead of just rote memorization. — RogueAI
I'm okay with that. I'm actually a huge fan of a rounded education, rather than one aimed at a 'career path' (which in my experience is a futile enterprise, often as not, because things change and keep changing.) I would be grateful if you could also squeeze in a bit of history and geography, but for pity's aske,* don't stint on sciences!What about having HS students take an "intro to maths" class, where the textbook covers "consumer math" (fraction, decimals, percents, etc.) and briefly touches on more advanced concepts. — RogueAI
Oh, really? And here I thought I was being facetious. Pretty soon, with increasing automation, there won't be (m)any jobs for adults, either. The 'modern world' is a fragile and volatile thing. Why assume it will continue as it is?There are not that many jobs in the modern world that are suitable for children between six and fourteen. — Tarskian
Right up until the power grid and internet break down. After that, when there are no professional environments, it's the ones who don't rely on devices who will have to solve the real life problems.Students learn exactly the opposite of what makes you productive in a professional environment. — Tarskian
If you are competing for a job with another person, and the other person isn't an HS graduate and you are, isn't that going to be a significant advantage for you? — RogueAI
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Pretty soon, with increasing automation, there won't be (m)any jobs for adults, either. The 'modern world' is a fragile and volatile thing. Why assume it will continue as it is? — Vera Mont
Education is an attempt to teach students the basics of how things work — Igitur
You can’t have a specialized path for every student — Igitur
It’s hard to know what a person will do, and you can’t have everyone decide at an early age, when education starts. — Igitur
Therefore, it’s necessary to teach a baseline in many topics and then later allow options for specialized learning. — Igitur
Current education does this fine. — Igitur
the knowledge of basic math must be taught — Igitur
We might still need a few doctors and architects....No, current education is pretty much a complete failure. I am surprised that any graduate finds any job at all. — Tarskian
Good. So that's where all the 34 million 14-year-olds dropouts should be heading. (Except those two dozen football players, five rappers and one stand-up comic.)For example, the best way to get into software engineering, is to do a 3-month bootcamp. — Tarskian
No, it doesn't. For example, if you want to figure out how to write a mobile app, no school will ever help you. — Tarskian
I’m not talking about programs that teach more specialized subjects, but instead specialized paths built into public education systems. Totally agree with this though, just not that some organization could create separate paths for every student in a largeish country.I would say that the only way to get people started in their career is a specialized path for every student. It is possible and it is being done already. — Tarskian
True. I was mainly talking about public education systems, and how they usually don’t have that many options to fully commit to a certain path because younger students aren’t trusted to make good decisions for themselves. The “starting point” would be higher education.Not having any starting point at all, is not the solution either. — Tarskian
Maybe. I was mainly saying the baseline educationBaseline generalities do not prepare for anything at all. We already know that. That is why youth unemployment is a reality nowadays. — Tarskian
No, current education is pretty much a complete failure. I am surprised that any graduate finds any job at all. — Tarskian
No, because Starbucks et alii do not require it. The cash till can perfectly handle all arithmetic. The cash till is a computer. — Tarskian
Good. So that's where all the 14-year-olds should be going when they drop out of school. — Vera Mont
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_Lowe
Harold Lowe was born in Llanrhos, Caernarvonshire, Wales, on 21 November 1882, the fourth of eight children, born to George Edward Lowe and Emma Harriette Quick. His father had ambitions for him to be apprenticed to a successful Liverpool businessman, but Harold Lowe was determined to go to sea. At 14, he ran away from his home in Barmouth where he had attended school and joined the Merchant Navy, serving along the West African Coast. Lowe started as a ship's boy aboard the Welsh coastal schooners as he worked to attain his certifications. In 1906, he passed his certification and gained his second mate's certificate, then in 1908, he attained his first mate's certificate.
We might still need a few doctors and architects — Vera Mont
Also, teaching someone how to make an app wouldn’t be the same as teaching them how apps work. — Igitur
The “starting point” would be higher education. — Igitur
I was mainly saying the baseline education
was necessary for students who wish to go into jobs that have to do with them. Kind of like a way of introducing a lot of jobs that need to be done, but otherwise might not. (Like math related ones.) — Igitur
talking mostly about experimental fields of science here — Igitur
They may come up anyway, but this education system probably either helps them learn about such subjects or helps more students to explore possibilities that they might not have without education. — Igitur
S0. A nation of innumerate illiterates who can't find North on a compass just need to be trained in which buttons to push. Maybe a chimp can instruct them.
I'm just lucky not to have any future! — Vera Mont
Teach your brats to cook, to grow food, to work wood and metal. And how to get along with the neighbours, which is by having all these useful skills that can help them stay alive. The machines are no longer your friends. — unenlightened
We used to be hunter-gatherers. So, don't grow food. Hunt it instead. — Tarskian
If we do that, we need to get rid of billions of people too. Who volunteers to leave first? Not me. — Tarskian
But then again, if higher education were such a fantastic starting point, then why do so many of its graduates end up slinging coffee at Starbucks? The proof is always in the pudding, isn't it? — Tarskian
There simply is no job where you have to manually compute math results. These students do not learn how to build such software. They also do not learn how to use such software. Instead, they learn how to fail at being themselves the software. — Tarskian
That's just another scam. The government spends money on "scientific research". Next, when there is scientific progress somewhere, the government is quick to claim credit for it, and then wants some more money for "scientific research". — Tarskian
You cannot make progress inside the system, because that will almost always be shut down. Every innovation is in one way or another a threat to existing interests. That is why all progress is made outside the system — Tarskian
Maybe true, but it could also be that most people aren’t interested in the jobs that education helps with attaining, and so for the majority it is not that helpful. What would you propose? — Igitur
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_Lowe
Harold Lowe was born in Llanrhos, Caernarvonshire, Wales, on 21 November 1882, the fourth of eight children, born to George Edward Lowe and Emma Harriette Quick. His father had ambitions for him to be apprenticed to a successful Liverpool businessman, but Harold Lowe was determined to go to sea. At 14, he ran away from his home in Barmouth where he had attended school and joined the Merchant Navy, serving along the West African Coast. Lowe started as a ship's boy aboard the Welsh coastal schooners as he worked to attain his certifications. In 1906, he passed his certification and gained his second mate's certificate, then in 1908, he attained his first mate's certificate.
And how can you pick the correct toll, if you don't know the arithmetical and algebraic procedures themselves? By at least learning to do them yourself, you understand them.Schooling in mathematics spends a lot of time on:
(1) carrying out arithmetical or algebraic procedures that a tool like wolfram alpha can perform automatically.
-> There is no job where you will ever be required to manually carry out procedures that a computer can carry out. — Tarskian
I disagree. The problem is that there's simply too much math to study at a slow pace. So teachers in school and in the university don't have the time to go really through how some "proof" finally got to be what is now. The pace is so quick it favours memorization and simply those who can use various algorithms quickly.Neither activity is meaningful in any shape or fashion. That is, however, what mathematics education is all about. — Tarskian
Inevitably!Wrong again — Tarskian
Oh, goodie! The six people who still understand some aspect of 'manual' programming can teach it to their children, set up dynasties and rule the world. For the +/-30 years (at the rate it's progressing, probably low end - you're looking at 1-generation dynasties.) it will take AI to generate its own programs.You see, the specialized knowledge is massively important to some people. However, shoving it down the throat of everyone else, is not the solution. They first need to learn how to use the software. — Tarskian
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