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Friday, April 20, 2007

Barry on Singapore

Singapore’s students were not always number 1 in the world in math. Its current math program was designed in 1992. Prior to that, the program used was one developed in 1981 that was focused primarily on content and computation, but not so much on problem solving. The economic situation of Singapore along with Singapore’s performance on an international math and science tests called SISS, given in 1983 led to the development of the new math series. In the SISS exam Singapore came in 16th among the other countries.
Prior to the 70’s, the education system had suffered from overcrowded schools—classes with 60 students were not uncommon and many schools used to run in 2 to 3 shifts. Teachers were not paid well, and there was a serious shortage of qualified math teachers. One key in building the labor workforce—one of the only natural resources Singapore offers—was to build a better education system. The education system was revamped in the 70’s, providing benefits for in-service and pre-service teachers and requiring that all classes be taught in English. Now many teachers are university graduates, and many math teachers in grades 7 through 12 are math majors. The change in the mathematics curriculum, brought about because of performance on SISS, was also a part of this overall change.

I believe this is the link for the extended version of Barry's Education Next article, "Miracle Math."

An A-Maze-ing Approach to Math is on its way to becoming a classic.

3 comments:

  1. Thanks for the link, but wrong one...

    Try this one:
    http://www.thirdeducationgroup.org/Review/Essays/v2n8.htm

    ReplyDelete
  2. Barry's article has moved to:

    http://www.npe.ednews.org/Review/Essays/v2n8.htm

    ReplyDelete