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An era of sweeping cultural change in America, the postwar years
saw the rise of beatniks and hippies, the birth of feminism, and
the release of the first video game. It was also the era of new
math. Introduced to US schools in the late 1950s and 1960s, the new
math was a curricular answer to Cold War fears of American
intellectual inadequacy. In the age of Sputnik and increasingly
sophisticated technological systems and machines, math class came
to be viewed as a crucial component of the education of
intelligent, virtuous citizens who would be able to compete on a
global scale.
In this history, Christopher J. Phillips examines the rise and
fall of the new math as a marker of the period's political and
social ferment. Neither the new math curriculum designers nor its
diverse legions of supporters concentrated on whether the new math
would improve students' calculation ability. Rather, they felt the
new math would train children to think in the right way, instilling
in students a set of mental habits that might better prepare them
to be citizens of modern society--a world of complex challenges,
rapid technological change, and unforeseeable futures. While
Phillips grounds his argument in shifting perceptions of
intellectual discipline and the underlying nature of mathematical
knowledge, he also touches on long-standing debates over the place
and relevance of mathematics in liberal education. And in so doing,
he explores the essence of what it means to be an intelligent
American--by the numbers.
An era of sweeping cultural change in America, the postwar years
saw the rise of beatniks and hippies, the birth of feminism, and
the release of the first video game. It was also the era of new
math. Introduced to US schools in the late 1950s and 1960s, the new
math was a curricular answer to Cold War fears of American
intellectual inadequacy. In the age of Sputnik and increasingly
sophisticated technological systems and machines, math class came
to be viewed as a crucial component of the education of
intelligent, virtuous citizens who would be able to compete on a
global scale. In this history, Christopher J. Phillips examines the
rise and fall of the new math as a marker of the period's political
and social ferment. Neither the new math curriculum designers nor
its diverse legions of supporters concentrated on whether the new
math would improve students' calculation ability. Rather, they felt
the new math would train children to think in the right way,
instilling in students a set of mental habits that might better
prepare them to be citizens of modern society a world of complex
challenges, rapid technological change, and unforeseeable futures.
While Phillips grounds his argument in shifting perceptions of
intellectual discipline and the underlying nature of mathematical
knowledge, he also touches on long-standing debates over the place
and relevance of mathematics in liberal education. And in so doing,
he explores the essence of what it means to be an intelligent
American by the numbers.
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