Subject: My Thoughts
Author:
Posted on: 2014-12-15 10:15:00 UTC

Personally, I have never really understood the vehemence with which some students dislike math. So far as I can determine, though, it is exactly like you describe it. They try this or that once, and when it doesn't immediately click they simply through their hands in the air in disgust and give up.

I grew up in an area with very high educational standards, and I was raised with that critical understanding that learning is crucial to one's success in life. Let me preface my next statement by saying that my old home was not some intellectual paradise, and I was often among those who simply phoned it in on certain mathematical principles when they were beyond my grasp.

That said, I moved for my last year of high school to a part of the country rather infamous for its low educational standards, and it was very noticeable from day one. Most glaringly, I was assigned to a math class teaching concepts I had learned two years before like they were new material. Obviously, this is simply a case of different curricula not lining up exactly, and we later went over at least one concept that I had learned more recently at the old school.

Still, my new home is worth mentioning because of the values dissonance that I noticed in just about every one of my new peers. I'm in a part of the country now that puts very little weight or import on education, and sometimes glorifies the state of being uneducated. Even among my naturally more intelligent friends, apathy toward their grades and the educational system in general is the norm.

This was noticeable in more subtle ways, as well. The standard of living for my teachers declined, the library shrunk, and the maintenance of the school itself went downhill. Both of the schools I attended were nearly equivalent as far as proximity to an urban center, the number of students present, and the classes offered. That said, the new school received a smaller budget and spent a larger percentage of that budget on funding the sports teams and various extra-curricular activities rather than the library or more advanced classes.

That's not to say I didn't enjoy the dances or the block party, and being the top student in several classes was definitely a good feeling, but sometimes I wonder how much more I would have learned if that last year had been in the same school as all the others instead of somewhere far away.

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