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Erin E.'s avatar

I never really understood the whole freak out about common core. I have a kid in 8th and a kid in 3rd, and for the most part I’ve found the methodology much easier to grasp than the rote memorization I grew up with. As a not-naturally-mathematically-inclined person, I found understanding the concepts that address *why* equations work the way they do to be very helpful. I don’t do abstract very well when it comes to math.

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John Hawks's avatar

I'm glad that some students and parents have good experiences with the Common Core approach. I wish I could say the same. I have four kids who survived the transition and all of them now hate math.

My youngest is near the top of his class in precalc, and wants to skip AP calculus and take AP statistics instead. His reasoning is simply that precalc is constantly frustrating. I observe his frustration is mostly coming from automated computer-based exercises that are required but not adequately scaffolded by the teacher.

I understand that Common Core was "well thought out" in terms of math concepts and progression into deeper areas of math. The implementation was and continues to be awful, and it is turning kids away from math. Statistics and computer science are picking up kids wherever they can count as math alternatives.

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