An Iowa woman jokingly calls it
"Satan's handiwork." A California mom says she's broken down in tears. A
Pennsylvania parent says it "makes my blood boil."
What could be so horrible? Grade-school math.
As
schools around the U.S. implement national Common Core learning
standards, parents trying to help their kids with math homework say that
adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing has become as complicated
as calculus.
They're stumped
by unfamiliar terms like "rectangular array" and "area model." They
wrestle with division that requires the use of squares, slashes and
dots. They rage over impenetrable word problems.
Stacey
Jacobson-Francis, 41, of Berkeley, California, said her daughter's
homework requires her to know four different ways to add.
"That
is way too much to ask of a first grader," she said. "She can't
remember them all, and I don't know them all, so we just do the best
that we can."
Simple arithmetic isn't so
simple anymore, leading to plenty of angst at home. Even celebrities
aren't immune: The comedian Louis C.K. took to Twitter recently to vent
about his kids' convoluted homework, writing that his daughters went
from loving math to crying about it.
Adopted
by 44 states, the Common Core is a set of English and math standards
that spell out what students should know and when. The standards for
elementary math emphasize that kids should not only be able to solve
arithmetic problems using the tried-and-true methods their parents
learned, but understand how numbers relate to each other.
"Part of
what we are trying to teach children is to become problem solvers and
thinkers," said Diane Briars, president of the National Council of
Teachers of Mathematics. "We want students to understand what they're
doing, not just get the right answer."That's a radically different approach than many parents are accustomed to.
Jennie Barnds, 40, of Davenport, Iowa, was puzzled by her fourth-grade daughter's long division homework, a foreign amalgam of boxes, slashes and dots with nary a quotient or dividend in sight.
"If we are sitting there
for 20 minutes trying to do a simple problem, how is an 8, 9,
10-year-old supposed to figure it out?" she said. "It's incredibly
frustrating for the student and the parent."
Whether Common Core itself is responsible for the homework headaches is a contentious issue.
Some
experts say Common Core promotes reform math, a teaching method that
gained currency in the 1990s. Derided as "fuzzy" math by critics, reform
math says kids should explore and understand concepts like place value
before they become fluent in the standard way of doing arithmetic.
Critics say it fails to stress basic computational skills, leaving
students unprepared for higher math.
Stanford
University mathematician James Milgram calls the reform math-inspired
standards a "complete mess" — too advanced for younger students, not
nearly rigorous enough in the upper grades. And teachers, he contends,
are largely ill-prepared to put the standards into practice.
"You
are asking teachers to teach something that is incredibly complicated
to kids who aren't ready for it," said Milgram, who voted against the
standards as part of the committee that reviewed them. "If you don't
think craziness will result, then you're being fundamentally naive."
Common Core supporters insist the standards are developmentally appropriate and driven by research.
"For
years there has been a raging debate in mathematics education about
which is more important, procedural fluency or conceptual understanding.
The obvious answer is 'both' and the standards give that answer," said
University of Arizona mathematician Bill McCallum, who co-wrote the math
standards.
Common Core
advocates acknowledge parents are frustrated, but blame the problems on
botched implementation, insufficient training or poorly written math
programs that predate Common Core.
They say schools also need to communicate better.
"The
homework can appear ridiculous when it is taken out of context — that's
where the biggest problem lies," said Steve O'Connor, a fifth-grade
math teacher in Wells, New York. "Parents don't have the context, nor
have they been given the means to see the context."
O'Connor has
set up a website in an effort to reduce parents' frustration over
homework. Other school districts have held workshops for parents to
learn alongside their children.But many parents say they've been on their own, complaining that districts have foisted new math curricula with little explanation.
In
Pennsylvania, which signed on to the national Common Core in 2010 but
developed its own version, Allison Lienhard said homework sessions with
her 10-year-old have ended in tears.
"She
gets frustrated because I can't do it the way they are supposed to do
it," Lienhard said. "To me, math is numbers, it's concrete, it's
black-and-white. I don't understand why you need to bring this
conceptual thing into math — at least not at this age."
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