points by ChaitanyaSai 2 days ago

I run a microschool and also teach maths there. I love this essay, and book, but by focusing on maths as art, it focuses on only one aspect of meaning. The larger issue with the way maths is taught, and especially maths, is that it is all mechanics. Now for a certain set of students, those mechanics are incredibly beautiful. Prime numbers have a seduction to them! A few more can be introduced to this beauty and aesthetics, but many are still not into it, and that's entirely okay. What's needed for kids to see and start accepting it is meaning. And meaning comes from connection to the real world. This is why kids who are unschooled but work in shops become great at arithmetic. It's part of their daily web of life. No amount of sanitized exposure to abstract aspects, however aesthetically dressed up will help most. The mind needs to answer "why do i need to care about this" to be open to learning. And this is not something that can come with instruction. It is lived experience, culture. To fix maths education,and any education, you need to bring in meaning before mechanics. Unfortunately the curriculum, assesment, and therefore teaching inevitably end up with focus on the mechanics, which is the wrong end. It is meaning > motivation > mechanics > measurement

School inverts this. And that's a tragedy.

Wrote about it here. https://blog.comini.in/p/schooling-has-a-meaning-crisis-para...

graemep 2 days ago

I also love A Mathameticians Lament. I did not know about Benezet so thanks for that. I found your blog post interesting too.

A lot of this reflects the approach I took to teaching my kids maths (and everything else), both before/alongside school and after I took them out of school. They are both very good at maths and enjoy it.

  • ChaitanyaSai 2 days ago

    Thanks! How early did you take them out of school? How old are they now.

    • graemep 2 days ago

      Both at about 8 or 9. I taught them a lot before that age because of unsatisfactory schools - especially when we were living (provincial Sri Lanka) at the time I started. The older one went in an out for a bit though. Especially with maths I did a lot of fun stuff with them because I did not like what (little!) the schools were doing.

      if you are familiar with the UK system they were both home educated up to GCSEs (taken at 16, end of compulsory school age here), then went to college (school for 16+) for A levels. The younger one is 18 and just finishing college - and her A level choices included maths, which is quite a turn around given she hated maths when she left school. Her older sister works in power electronics R & D.

      • ChaitanyaSai 1 day ago

        Thanks for sharing this. So lovely to hear and hope they find their joy and meaning in whatever they do!