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Schmidt pointed out that kids in dozens of other countries are required take algebra in eighth grade or even earlier. Yet he agrees with Loveless that U.S. students desperately need better preparation. Math is not like other subjects, said R. James Milgram, a Stanford University mathematician. It is hierarchical, with first-grade math forming the foundation for second-grade math and so on. "It takes six to eight years of solid math to prepare kids to be ready to take algebra," Milgram said. "So if you do not learn the support, you collapse at a certain point. You simply cannot go further," he said. Milgram did not work on this study, but he has worked with Loveless on other research. Vern Williams, a nationally recognized math teacher in Fairfax County, Va., said the campaign for eighth-grade algebra can result in classes that aren't really algebra. "Unless a kid is ready for a real algebra course, you do one of two things: either you give the kid a low grade, which means you're admitting the kid wasn't prepared, or you make the course watered-down," Williams said. "It's algebra in name only," he said.
That is another point the study makes. In the end, Loveless argues it does more harm than good to put unprepared students in what he called "fake" algebra classes taught by under-prepared teachers. "It's not a good thing, and it does not lead to equity," Loveless said. "It might make everyone feel better, but the whole arrangement is counterfeit." ___ On the Net: Brookings Institution: http://www.brookings.edu/
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