PhotoMath Solves Math Problems via Video
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@scottalanmiller said:
It's a means of discourages kids who like math, that's for sure. It might help someone who is struggling, but those who struggle with math are unlikely to use much of it, no matter how much they are pushed to learn, in high school. Most jobs require essentially no math and most of the population retains no math from high school after graduation. The only real bad outcome is if those who do enjoy and excel at math are discouraged. That kind of forcing people to show steps makes math students, especially, reconsider math and science jobs to a large degree because it discourages them from taking math in college or, in many cases, going on to college at all.
It hurts those that we should be encouraging (in math) the most while encouraging those that aren't self motivated, are trying to cheat or just aren't that interested.
Very true, at least from my own perspective.
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For me it was actually the college math professors, no the high school ones, that drove me away from math and engineering. I knew more math in high school than I did in college, my professors were so bad that I actually lost abilities that I already had because they taught me so much bad stuff. It was so discouraging and such a waste of my time that it was the primary reason why I dropped out of college.
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@scottalanmiller Yeah, I honestly never went to college because all of the applications required writing essays. I hate writing essays, ergo, I never filled out a single application.
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OK Speaking of math - what do you guys think of Common Core?
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Don't ask.
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Oh boy as homeschooling parents don't get us all started on that one.
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@thanksaj said:
I agree with Scott. Being forced to show work on problems I could easily do in my head and get right 99 times out of 100 was tedious and frustrating. Also, a lot of teachers looked for specific patterns, and if you didn't follow those patterns, you'd be marked as wrong .
This, I had this argument with multiple math teachers in high school and college. If I can arrive at the same answer as you do while going through a different process (on paper or in my head) why am I being marked for that process.
The argument that I received is that it wouldn't work every time... when asked to give me an example they would rattle off a problem that was in the same form as the one before... either they didn't realize it or thought it was more difficult... when I gave them the answer, one of the teachers had to do it on paper to ensure I was correct. Frustrating to say the least.
Of course after 6 years of college (both grad and undergrad) I can no longer do even simple math problems in my head... which is even more frustrating then being confronted by a teacher.
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@coliver said:
This, I had this argument with multiple math teachers in high school and college. If I can arrive at the same answer as you do while going through a different process (on paper or in my head) why am I being marked for that process.
Logic would state that it is equally as likely that the teacher should be marked wrong. You each have your own process and there is no way to know which process is better. It is equally as wrong to show work as to not show work or to use one reliable process as another reliable process, in that case.
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@coliver said:
This, I had this argument with multiple math teachers in high school and college. If I can arrive at the same answer as you do while going through a different process (on paper or in my head) why am I being marked for that process.
Unless the instructions tell you to use a specific method, using a method other than the one they want shouldn't be counted against you.
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@Dashrender said:
OK Speaking of math - what do you guys think of Common Core?
The whole CC thing is so complicated and convoluted that as a parent, it is impossible to determine what is actually CC, what is just made up and what is an attempting implementation of the CC and not the CC itself. I can't really judge the CC very well, only the results of it. The results appear to be a complete abandonment of education in America. But is that the CC's fault or is that just the CC providing an excuse for schools to do less. I can't tell.
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@Dashrender said:
OK Speaking of math - what do you guys think of Common Core?
I've heard of the nonsense that is Common Core.
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What can you expect? The American model for education promotes mediocrity, while giving lip service to excellence.
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I read something last year (more earlier) about how our education system is actually just a way to keep the masses down. I personally don't believe that to be true - but I'll definitely give you that we are not using the best methods for teaching.
Global online individual learning is probably the way we need to go. Now just to find out how to build it and financially support it.
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@Dashrender said:
OK Speaking of math - what do you guys think of Common Core?
I worked in a school the first year the Common Core was introduced. Teachers hated it, the administration didn't like it due to cost and budgetary reasons, parents didn't like it because it was difficult to understand and almost impossible to help their kids with. I wasn't a fan because it put additional work and responsibilities on an already taxed technology department.
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@Dashrender said:
I read something last year (more earlier) about how our education system is actually just a way to keep the masses down. I personally don't believe that to be true - but I'll definitely give you that we are not using the best methods for teaching.
Global online individual learning is probably the way we need to go. Now just to find out how to build it and financially support it.
If you want to really get into it, the American education system is an early indoctrination system.
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@thanksaj said:
@Dashrender said:
I read something last year (more earlier) about how our education system is actually just a way to keep the masses down. I personally don't believe that to be true - but I'll definitely give you that we are not using the best methods for teaching.
Global online individual learning is probably the way we need to go. Now just to find out how to build it and financially support it.
If you want to really get into it, the American education system is an early indoctrination system.
Welcome to Americanism, where the intelligent and creative get punished and the mediocre get rewarded.
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@art_of_shred said:
What can you expect? The American model for education promotes mediocrity, while giving lip service to excellence.
At its core, it was always designed to build a blue collar working class. That was its goal. Equip people for basic manual and semi-skilled labour while keeping kids, who are not very productive, out of the workforce in order to curb unemployment. It does a relatively good job at this.
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@thanksaj said:
@Dashrender said:
I read something last year (more earlier) about how our education system is actually just a way to keep the masses down. I personally don't believe that to be true - but I'll definitely give you that we are not using the best methods for teaching.
Global online individual learning is probably the way we need to go. Now just to find out how to build it and financially support it.
If you want to really get into it, the American education system is an early indoctrination system.
Thanks, AJ. That is about the most intelligent comment in this whole thread.
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@art_of_shred said:
@thanksaj said:
@Dashrender said:
I read something last year (more earlier) about how our education system is actually just a way to keep the masses down. I personally don't believe that to be true - but I'll definitely give you that we are not using the best methods for teaching.
Global online individual learning is probably the way we need to go. Now just to find out how to build it and financially support it.
If you want to really get into it, the American education system is an early indoctrination system.
Thanks, AJ. That is about the most intelligent comment in this whole thread.
Serious or sarcastic?
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@Dashrender said:
I read something last year (more earlier) about how our education system is actually just a way to keep the masses down. I personally don't believe that to be true - but I'll definitely give you that we are not using the best methods for teaching.
Global online individual learning is probably the way we need to go. Now just to find out how to build it and financially support it.
I can appreciate the sentiment but I think that it is less conspiracy than that. The economy only needs a handful of really good, high end workers. It needs tons of relatively similar manual workers and, more recently, service workers. We needs tons more baristas, bar tenders, waiters, taxi drivers, etc. than we do engineers, scientists and IT people. Way more. So the school system is designed to focus on the majority, who aren't going to motivate themselves, and is willing to sacrifice the potential top end workers in the hopes that they will either come from rich families who will keep them from going through the system or that they will be so self motivated that they will self select out.
The ones who are really hurt by the system are the exceptional students who come from non-rich families or who lack parents willing to help them find better education. Those that are caught as good students in the bad systems are the big losers.