Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

Of course: Mathematics perpetuates white privilege

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A photograph of the Greek letter pi, created as a large stone mosaic embedded in the ground.
pi in mosaic, Berlin/Holger Motzkau

From Toni Airaksinen at Campus Reform:

“On many levels, mathematics itself operates as Whiteness. Who gets credit for doing and developing mathematics, who is capable in mathematics, and who is seen as part of the mathematical community is generally viewed as White,” Gutierrez argued.

Gutierrez also worries that algebra and geometry perpetuate privilege, fretting that “curricula emphasizing terms like Pythagorean theorem and pi perpetuate a perception that mathematics was largely developed by Greeks and other Europeans.”

Math also helps actively perpetuate white privilege too, since the way our economy places a premium on math skills gives math a form of “unearned privilege” for math professors, who are disproportionately white.

Further, she also worries that evaluations of math skills can perpetuate discrimination against minorities, especially if they do worse than their white counterparts. More.

What garbage. Gutierrez’ (and many others’) real goal is to protect abysmally failing school systems. Put another way: The kid who is failing math (“if they do worse than their white counterparts?”) often negotiates complex games and social media, using a variety of rules and signal systems.

Which naturally leads one to ask, why can just anyone at all teach the kid better than the publicly funded compulsory school systems that Gutierrez is protecting?

A friend describes this woman as the anti-Escalante., He’s referring to an inspired math teacher, Jaime Escalante, who developed methods for helping disadvantaged minority kids achieve (but all his reforms were later dismantled by the tax-funded bureaucracy, of course).

Disadvantaged minority students lag in achievement mainly because the education system banged out in the 19th century is a millstone today. It benefits unions, bureaucrats, textbook publishers, and lobbyists. Of course, the students with the fewest alternatives to these rent-seekers suffer the most. But don’t expect to hear anything like that from a beneficiary like Gutierrez.

Right now, however, the biggest problem is the silence from the big science bureaucracies over the growing number of attacks on science like this one. The ‘crats seem obsessed with, for example, doubt of Darwinism among students.

Hey folks, those are high-class worries compared to what you face from the social justice warriors. Ask Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying.

Unfortunately, the ‘crats will probably avoid the problem as long as they can until they find an unobtrusive way to just cave. Thus, freedom in education—including academic freedom—is about to become more important than ever for parents and students.

Note: Anyone remember the film Hidden Figures? No, we thought not. Maybe that’ll get slammed as racist too, if it hasn’t already been.

See also: Johnny Bartlett: Why teach algebra?

Algebra is not racist.

Bill Dembski’s new online book on inspired learning (It Takes Ganas: Jaime Escalante’s secret to inspired learning)

Nature: Stuck with a battle it dare not fight, even for the soul of science. Excuse me guys but, as in so many looming strategic disasters, the guns are facing the wrong way.

Parents questioning curricula? Must be “anti-science” at work

Biology prof Bret Weinstein’s persecutors face sanctions from Evergreen State College

Comments
News,
And people generally don’t feel that way about cars because…?
I don't know what this refers to, but for whatever reason, we think differently about cars than people and other things.
How about this: A flak for a corrupt education system finds it easier to market an “ethnic” buzz around flunking algebra than around flunking one’s license…
Whether she's a flak or not, I suspect she's right about a few things. In particular, that some unnecessary barriers exist at educational institutions, and some of these barriers are related to the concentration of white males in some disciplines. And it's not that these white males are especially malevolent, but rather that they are sometimes unaware of these barriers.
It’s not the kids I have an issue with.
Good; me neither. I'm sure we are both interested in seeing them get the best education possible.daveS
October 24, 2017
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daveS at 4: And people generally don't feel that way about cars because...? How about this: A flak for a corrupt education system finds it easier to market an "ethnic" buzz around flunking algebra than around flunking one's license... It's not the kids I have an issue with. They were born into the mess. They won't benefit from it either.News
October 24, 2017
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What difference would it make if it had ALL been invented by Greeks? Tools belong to those who can use them today, not the dead hands that invented them.
That seems obvious to adults such as us with a fair amount of life experience, but I'm attempting to look at this through the eyes of a first-generation minority college student in the USA who is entering a foreign culture. That's how I've heard it described by Latino friends, anyway. It takes some time for these students to feel that they really own the culture that they are exposed to in college. For that reason, I believe it's useful to at least be aware of ways in which disciplines might seem "foreign" to some students, and mitigate that if possible.daveS
October 24, 2017
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daveS at 2, What difference would it make if it had ALL been invented by Greeks? Tools belong to those who can use them today, not the dead hands that invented them.News
October 24, 2017
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“curricula emphasizing terms like Pythagorean theorem and pi perpetuate a perception that mathematics was largely developed by Greeks and other Europeans.”
I think there is a reasonable point here. Minority students in the US are not always made to feel welcome in some disciplines (including mathematics), and some of "our" traditional names for these theorems/concepts perhaps suggest a greater European contribution than is warranted. I don't think that we should rename the Pythagorean Theorem, but we should be aware that knowledge of the theorem (but perhaps not its proof) apparently existed long before Pythagoras' time. As Boyer's Law (due to Hubert Kennedy) states, "mathematical formulas and theorems are usually not named after their original discoverers". OTOH, try telling a Chinese person that mathematics is for "white people"; they likely will find it hilarious.daveS
October 24, 2017
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Utter nonsense. Shameful.Truth Will Set You Free
October 24, 2017
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