A Problem to Solve
Should we blame Greek mathematician Diophantus or Persian mathematician Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi? Depending on whom you ask, you’ll probably be told that one of them invented algebra, that hurdle which so many high school students fail to clear.
And maybe we’re just tormenting ourselves and our kids pointlessly by trying to clear it. Writing in the New York Times on Sunday, political scientist Andrew Hacker argued that failing to learn algebra is behind a lot of high school dropout rates (over 33% in some states), leading many kids to miss out on otherwise promising futures. “Yes, young people should learn to read and write and do long division, whether they want to or not,” Hacker asserted. “But there is no reason to force them to grasp vectorial angles and discontinuous functions. Think of math as a huge boulder we make everyone pull, without assessing what all this pain achieves.”
Of course, some proponents of algebra will argue that high standards are, to some extent, their own reward. In his book The New Realities, Peter Drucker deplored what he saw as a loosening of academic standards in order to avoid accusations of “racism” and to appease “parents of the very children who need [the standards] most.”
But whether such standards should include algebra was another matter. Drucker recognized that many of the benchmarks of general learning have been chosen arbitrarily—leaving teachers trying to cram far too much information into young minds. The process “debases the subject matter, which has to adapt itself to the lack of experience in the student,” Drucker wrote in Landmarks of Tomorrow. “It thus becomes not only expensive time but wasted time.”
For Drucker, the biggest timewaster he’d experienced during his eight years of Austrian Gymnasium was ancient languages—“Latin irregular verbs,” to be exact. “Yet, partly because it had no usefulness . . . it was—and still is—mistaken for higher education,” he wrote.
As for subjects to be studied, Drucker suggested that it was often hard to judge what makes sense and what doesn’t. “The practical test of education in educated society is whether it prepares for the demands of the work 15 years after graduation,” Drucker wrote. “Since we live in an age of innovation, a practical education must prepare a man for work that does not yet exist and cannot yet be clearly defined.”
So perhaps the question is whether algebra will prepare us for jobs in 2027. Call it the X factor.
What do you think: Should students have to demonstrate a mastery of algebra before they can graduate from high school?




3 Comments
Jeffrey Smyth
August 3, 2012Having both studied and taught Latin, and studied algebra, I conclude that they are both esoteric and of limited value except for the scholar. English and arithmetic — now there’s a winning combination for all!
Maverick18
August 3, 2012To graduate high school, students have to pass a required curriculum, as well as elective courses.I don’t recall that they have to “demonstrate a mastery” of anything. This may explain why America is losing ground in many fields while Asian nations are gaining. In a competitive world with over 7 billion people, on a stool with a dunce cap is not the place to be.
Greg Zerovnik
August 4, 2012Only if they want to be allowed to vote. You might wonder why I would say such a thing. Well, humans make decisions using both emotional and rational means. I would argue that algebra is a rational reasoning skill, without which one is ill-equipped to make rational voting decisions. When one is governed only by emotions, untempered by critical reasoning skills, one should forfeit a right to vote. Or, at most, have one’s vote count for a half of a vote of someone who has passed high school algebra.