Why Math Class Is Boring—and What to Do About It

Why Math Class Is Boring—and What to Do About It

Math is portrayed as something you get or you don’t. Most of us sit in class feeling like we don’t. What if the standard curriculum were a gross misrepresentation of the subject? What if it were possible to teach mathematics in a manner naturally incorporating the kinds of activities that appeal to children and learners of all ages?

In 2002, Paul Lockhart penned “A Mathematician’s Lament,” a 25-page essay that was later expanded into a book

In the essay, Lockhart declares that students who say their mathematics classes are stupid and boring are correct-though the subject itself is not.

What other subject is taught without any mention of its history, philosophy, thematic development, aesthetic criteria, and current status?

Mathematics should be something we engage with because we find it to be a fun, challenging process capable of teaching us new ways to think or allowing us to express ourselves.

What if art students spent years studying paints and brushes, without ever getting to unleash their imaginations on a blank canvas?

Next year they take Pre-Paint-by-Numbers, which prepares them for the main Paint-By-Numbers sequence in high school

What we learn in school is merely the end product

We don’t teach the process of creating math. We teach only the steps to repeat someone else’s creation without exploring how they got there-or why.

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