BlogU

  • Math Geek Mom: Teach Our Daughters Math

    By Rosemarie Emanuele November 6, 2008 9:11 pm

    The American Mathematical Society recently published a study (Cross-Cultural Analysis of Students with Exceptional Talent in Mathematical Problem Solving) that finds evidence to disprove the widely held idea that girls are not as good at math as boys are. Instead, the relative small percent of girls excelling in math is traced to cultural forces found in the U.S., forces that can be changed so girls can approach the study of math with an open mind. While such changes would open doors to girls, it would also benefit society in general. To find the true cost of such social forces discouraging girls, we must think in terms of what girls bring to society through their math skills.

    What is the cost of perpetuating the myth that girls can’t do math? The most immediate cost is to our daughters themselves, who are then denied access to many careers that depend on math. As many have noted, the high paying jobs in our economy today tend to rely heavily on math. To deny our young women good mathematical education is to forever deny them entry into the more lucrative positions in the labor market, and to make the return to their time worth less than the return to their brothers’.

    But there is another cost to this, too. When our children learn skills that help them use their own talents to the best of their ability, they bring creativity to our world that would otherwise not be there. There is therefore an externality involved, as the cost of such negative ideas, like the effects of second-hand smoke, extends beyond the little girls who are hurt and affects society as a whole. How many girls do not become doctors, how many potential teachers do not pursue teaching, because they mistakenly believed that math would forever be a foreign language to them? To limit them and their future is to lose not only the skills that they can bring to our world, but also to limit our world’s potential.

    When I first started teaching math at our small women’s college, I was surprised at how many students came to me saying that they had “math phobia”. This was something completely foreign to me, since I have been encouraged to study math from my earliest years in grammar school, and have found discussions about how boys are naturally better than girls at math to be odd and unsettling. How could this be, since I was obviously pretty good at math?

    Unlike many, I was gifted with excellent teachers who did not allow me to buy into the perspective that girls can’t do math. Instead, I was encouraged to study math and math related subjects. This was very different from some others in my generation, who were told that boys did math and girls did not. I am now chair of a mathematics department at our college, and see the effects of such ideas on my students. I have had students sit in my office in tears telling me that they simply can’t do math. I think they were surprised when I do not believe them, but instead help them to find ways to learn the math we are studying. Some of these students were returning students in their mid 40s or beyond who have raised multiple children successfully. With only one child, I am in awe of their accomplishments in life, and so try to convince them that they HAVE been doing math all along. They had stretched budgets to meet the needs of large families, and had made important financial decisions that had allowed their families to flourish even in hard times. As I teach them basic math concepts, I am very aware that there is much about the practical applications of math to everyday life that they could teach me. If only they had been encouraged in this field at a younger age!

    When you interact with young girls in your life, I hope that you encourage them to pursue any interest in math that they might exhibit. Not only will they be better off for it, but so will we all.

Advertisement

Comments on Math Geek Mom: Teach Our Daughters Math

  • Helping girls LIKE math
  • Posted by Karen D on November 7, 2008 at 8:25am EST
  • I'm one of those who as a girl assumed I couldn't do math and let so many opportunities pass me by. As the mother of a 12 year old girl, I have worked hard to instill in her the fact that ANYTHING can be learned...just that we gravitate more to what we like. Now her mantra is "I just don't LIKE math". Hmmm...I screwed up the message somehow and need to know how to fix it. I'd really like her to embrace math more so she has all options on the table in terms of what she'll become professionally.

  • Girls and science in Saudi
  • Posted by Anne Osman at Batterjee Medical College on November 7, 2008 at 10:30am EST
  • An American, I have taught, for more than twenty years, young women of many nationalities.
    In high school in southern Illinois in the late 60’s, I was the only girl who had EVER taken a course in physics. The instructor, offended by my presence in the lab, seated me in the far back of the classroom, four rows behind the last boy, where I could not see the board, excluded me from every activity, and felt that this strategy was vindicated by my consequent poor performance.
    In the 1980’s, I read in the New York Times a scholarly article explaining why women are unable to do well in mathematics and physical science: structural differences in the brain! The article was accompanied by illustrations of the supposedly responsible anatomical differences.
    In 1987, I went to work at a girls’ school in Saudi Arabia, where I was astonished to discover that female students are required to take exactly the same mathematics and physical science courses as are boys: from seventh through twelfth grade, six years each of biology, chemistry, physics, and mathematics, including trigonometry and calculus. This is true not only in Saudi, but throughout the Arab world and in South Asia. In Saudi, girls do much better, on the average, than boys do, in all of their subjects, including these.
    If we teach any class or group or gender or nationality of students that they are unable to achieve, their general performance will prove us right.
    If we expect every single student of every class, group, gender, and nationality to succeed, every single one, male or female, will, within the natural, not the taught, limits of her/his ability.

  • Things are improving.
  • Posted by Faculty Person on November 7, 2008 at 3:25pm EST
  • My daughter's Facebook profile says "I totally LOVE Calculus" -- and while young women like her are still rare I believe their numbers are increasing.

  • Posted by George on November 8, 2008 at 7:30am EST
  • Recent comic pertinent to the topic:

    http://news.yahoo.com/comics/uclickcomics/cx_ft_uc/latest

    (make sure it is the comic for November 2)

  • So many reasons why...
  • Posted by MB on November 10, 2008 at 10:46am EST
  • I am a woman in my early thirties and when I was in elementary school I hated math. When I told my parents this to explain my poor grades, my mother sympathized and said she had also done poorly in math and I wasn't likely to need it much in the future. However, in my competitive high school and college I excelled in geometry, algebra, statistics, and trig. Ironically, I still can't do basic math well without writing it out. The reason- speed tests made my brain freeze up- and my poor grades in this elementary school staple made me think I couldn't do well in math. I also didn't pay much attention when we were learning multiplication tables and other basics which meant that although I can understand more complex math functions, I'm not great at doing basic math in my head.

    I'll never tell any of my children that girls don't do well in math or that any of my children won't need math in the future (an outdated myth, if I ever heard one). As I child I never expected it, but in my career as a policy advocate math is very important. Thanks for this article.

  • Posted by Parent on November 19, 2008 at 4:40pm EST
  • Hi. I'm the father of a 14 year old girl. She's a bright girl, but "hates" math. She's at the point where she "doesn't care" whether or not she gets it -- meaning that she's so frustrated that sh's given up. We've had her tested (no major learning disability) and gotten her a tutor, but her attitude (and skills apparently) haven't improved. Does anyone know of a program, literature, book, person, camp etc... that provides resources aimed at reaching math-frustrated middle school girls? If so, please let me know. Thanks!