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EdAction
Maple River Education Coalition PAC
105 Peavey Rd, St 116
Chaska, MN
55318
952-361-4931
http://www.EdAction.org
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November 19, 2003
EdWatch: NAEP Results
Confirm Minnesota's
Compliance with National "Fuzzy Math" Standards
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(SAINT PAUL, MN) EdWatch, a statewide parent/citizen education watchdog
organization, said that Minnesota's number one ranking on the National
Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) for math confirms that, under
the Profile of Learning graduation standards, Minnesota leads the nation
in teaching "fuzzy math."
"Remember, the NAEP does not measure individual student
achievement," said Julie Quist, director of EdWatch. "The NAEP
assesses compliance with the 'voluntary' national standards. It is the
accountability instrument for the federal No Child Left Behind Act."
"Fuzzy math" programs endorsed by the U.S. Department of
Education and used in Minnesota include: Connected Mathematics Program (CMP),
Core-Plus Mathematics Project, The University of Chicago School
Mathematics Project (UCSMP or "Chicago Math"), and Everyday
Mathematics. Also known as "integrated math," the approach is
characterized by:
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"Threads" mixed together
and revisited repeatedly, instead of in discrete courses such as
algebra, geometry, trigonometry, and pre-calculus
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Group work, with teacher as
"facilitator"
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Student discovery of rules and
procedures by themselves, and word problems and projects with very few
rules, definitions, summaries, or drill-type exercises
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Student dependence on calculators,
computers, and technology
This dumbed-down approach to teaching
K-12 math has forced up to 40% of students entering Minnesota public
colleges and universities from public school into remedial coursework,
mostly in mathematics. In response, public school parents in Eden Prairie
and other districts have called for a return to traditional math programs.
"Far from validating the Profile of Learning, the recent NAEP results
expose the Profile's legacy of a Johnny who can't add 2 plus 2 without a
calculator," said Quist. "Fortunately, Minnesota's new Academic
Standards in mathematics will help our public school students to succeed
in math, regardless of whether they go on to higher education or the
workforce.
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