I'm not really sure if I agree with it being crazy. It seems that the students capable of "higher" math will still be able to choose to take those courses in 11th and 12th grade.
If they eliminated them all together I could see it being a problem, but they aren't.
The students who are gifted in math will be bored out of their minds by 10th grade, and will not have the exposure to more complicated concepts when they get to the proposed grade for the "harder" stuff.
I am all for eliminating math wherever and whenever.
Yeah, no need for math to work on the best cures for cancer, right? Want to talk to my daughter getting her PhD in BioInformatics?
The plan will.not.hold.anyone.back.
Yes.it.will. Unless you expect teachers to teach multiple levels of math in one classroom, which is stupid.
Here's the full paragraph you quoted some of. Read the second part of the paragraph.
1. Pyle didn't provide an immediate answer to concerns that the new model would hold kids back. It's unclear how exactly the differentiation would occur.
2.When asked for more details, Pyle said, "Differentiated instruction is designed to provide the appropriate levels of challenge and academic rigor for each student."
Looks like the plan is in the development stages and I'm sure the districts considering this will be hashing out exact details.
Of course this is how they do it - come up with some wishy-washy plan (remember open classrooms? Dumbest thing ever) and then toss it at the schools to figure it out (or not). Basically, they are asking a teacher to teach remedial, regular, and honors math in one classroom at the same time. It's stupid.
Most of what is taught in college involves concepts and information that often is not used later in life. I can't remember the last time I used Shakespeare.
Most history courses.
Most English courses.
All the sciences (unless you go into a scientific field).
Most math courses.
Decades later, I still use what I learned in my major but that was only about one-fourth of the courses that I took.
Education should teach practical information but it also should exercise the mind.
'Tis torture and not mercy..." I quote Shakespeare all the time. We learn from history so we can learn from our mistakes as human beings (hopefully) and English classes maintain a standard of language that allows more efficient communication. Biology teaches about life on this planet, as does Chemistry and Physics. I agree that education should teach practical stuff too, and exercise the mind.
Traditional math curriculums do need to be modified in some places. (Some would say "dumbed down.") A friend living in Virginia tells me that there are high schools where most students are failing math. So there is some basis of truth in the article, even if it's (most likely) being misrepresented.
Then those schools need to look at who teaches, what is taught, and how, all the way back to pre-K. It's not the math curricula, per se, but the way it is taught that matters. It really needs to be hands on at an early age, and parents need to be on board, not just say "I am all for eliminating math wherever and whenever."