Oregon Plan to Undo "Racism in Mathematics".
In college, I purposely selected STEM course with those instructors who had the fiercest reputations for having high standards. I scored highly on those exams as well, and about 3/4s of the people who started their engineering courses at the same time as I either switched majors to HASS courses, or dropped out of college completely.
Now, when I interview candidates for positions in my company, I administer a simple 50-question test on basic electrical theory (i.e., Ohm's Law, Kirchoff's Law, Watt's Law, et cetera). Those who pass the test (e.g., 35 or more correct answers) move on to the personal interview; those who do not pass are thanked and invited to try again on the next job posting.
I do not hire based on looks, personality, or religious/political affiliation, but on merit instead.
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The mere fact that science may not yet adequately explain an object, event, or experience does not mean the immediate explanation should automatically default to a conspiratorial, extraterrestrial, paranormal, or supernatural cause.
This will seem strange, but as an older white male, I am in a small minority within my chemistry department. Many coworkers have been vocal about gradually pushing me out of the department, so that they can replace me with someone more like themselves. They say it is to promote diversity, but they will only hire friends that are mirror images and graduated from the same university. It is like they want a Xerox copy of themselves. They will soon get their wish when I transition out of higher education within a few years. I have had enough. It is time to move on to another career outside of teaching. I used to really love teaching students, until the departmental politics polluted it too much.
I will be the first to admit that I am far from perfect. I was born a human and unfortunately still have a small part of my humanity left. Hopefully, I will figure out how to completely remove that before I die.
In college, I purposely selected STEM course with those instructors who had the fiercest reputations for having high standards. I scored highly on those exams as well, and about 3/4s of the people who started their engineering courses at the same time as I either switched majors to HASS courses, or dropped out of college completely.
Now, when I interview candidates for positions in my company, I administer a simple 50-question test on basic electrical theory (i.e., Ohm's Law, Kirchoff's Law, Watt's Law, et cetera). Those who pass the test (e.g., 35 or more correct answers) move on to the personal interview; those who do not pass are thanked and invited to try again on the next job posting.
I do not hire based on looks, personality, or religious/political affiliation, but on merit instead.
I wish my department did that in the hiring process. Alas, it has become a popularity contest here, with nepotism involved.
In college, I purposely selected STEM course with those instructors who had the fiercest reputations for having high standards. I scored highly on those exams as well, and about 3/4s of the people who started their engineering courses at the same time as I either switched majors to HASS courses, or dropped out of college completely.
Now, when I interview candidates for positions in my company, I administer a simple 50-question test on basic electrical theory (i.e., Ohm's Law, Kirchoff's Law, Watt's Law, et cetera). Those who pass the test (e.g., 35 or more correct answers) move on to the personal interview; those who do not pass are thanked and invited to try again on the next job posting.
I do not hire based on looks, personality, or religious/political affiliation, but on merit instead.
_________________
The mere fact that science may not yet adequately explain an object, event, or experience does not mean the immediate explanation should automatically default to a conspiratorial, extraterrestrial, paranormal, or supernatural cause.
In college, I purposely selected STEM course with those instructors who had the fiercest reputations for having high standards. I scored highly on those exams as well, and about 3/4s of the people who started their engineering courses at the same time as I either switched majors to HASS courses, or dropped out of college completely.
Now, when I interview candidates for positions in my company, I administer a simple 50-question test to on basic electrical theory (i.e., Ohm's Law, Kirchoff's Law, Watt's Law, et cetera). Those who pass the test (e.g., 35 or more correct answers) move on to the personal interview; those who do not pass are thanked and invited to try again on the next job posting.
I do not hire based on looks, personality, or religious/political affiliation, but on merit instead.
It will not work with the department. They think that they can do whatever they like. The head of my department had threatened my job at the start of my employment if I did anything against them, so they would be happy to see me go. I am a lower tiered (non-tenured track) employee, so I do not have much pull. When I finally leave, I will be presenting a nice package of evidence (legally taped conversations of meetings, emails, etc.) to the HR department for them to review as they see fit. It likely will not even get looked at, so the department will slowly decay under their own policies. I do feel bad for the students who are caught in the aftermath though.
In college, I purposely selected STEM course with those instructors who had the fiercest reputations for having high standards. I scored highly on those exams as well, and about 3/4s of the people who started their engineering courses at the same time as I either switched majors to HASS courses, or dropped out of college completely.
Now, when I interview candidates for positions in my company, I administer a simple 50-question test to on basic electrical theory (i.e., Ohm's Law, Kirchoff's Law, Watt's Law, et cetera). Those who pass the test (e.g., 35 or more correct answers) move on to the personal interview; those who do not pass are thanked and invited to try again on the next job posting.
I do not hire based on looks, personality, or religious/political affiliation, but on merit instead.
_________________
The mere fact that science may not yet adequately explain an object, event, or experience does not mean the immediate explanation should automatically default to a conspiratorial, extraterrestrial, paranormal, or supernatural cause.
In our system here, to add insult to injury, there's the peculiar detail that high-quality higher education (the type that practically guarantees employment) is often free, while the low-quality variety is not. So there's this extra sort of tax on the poor who don't want their CV immediately thrown in the garbage. I was talking with my father about this, he said "did you know that one of our recent education ministers was himself a major stakeholder in an education company?". Oh wow, what a shocking surprise, what are the odds. Cram schools and diploma mills are big business. There's a reason (well, lots of them really) why I'm very, very skeptical and cynical when it comes to these types of supposedly "socially-progressive" measures and what actual motives may be involved.
If you're a really bright student here, you can probably get into a good university. There's no tuition fee, admittance is strictly based on standardized exams (with the only exception that students from public schools, and I think black students too nowadays, are granted a small boost in their scores), and public universities offer supplementary introductory courses for students who may still have difficulty with certain specific subjects they're supposed to know already. My university also offered nearly-free food and free accommodations for people who really can't afford rent (really shoddy apartments, but still).
So there's a very strong narrative that it's an entirely meritocratic system. But if you're poor and you're not that rare genius, chances are you'll go through life unfamiliar with the very idea that you should actually ever even be supposed to know stuff. Your future will be determined almost entirely by how well-connected you are. Apart from obviously perpetuating inequalities, it's bound to feed misdirected discontent.
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earth is just a tiny ball
So the issue with "Racism in Mathematics", may really be with "Classism in Teaching".
_________________
The mere fact that science may not yet adequately explain an object, event, or experience does not mean the immediate explanation should automatically default to a conspiratorial, extraterrestrial, paranormal, or supernatural cause.
In college, I purposely selected STEM course with those instructors who had the fiercest reputations for having high standards. I scored highly on those exams as well, and about 3/4s of the people who started their engineering courses at the same time as I either switched majors to HASS courses, or dropped out of college completely.
Now, when I interview candidates for positions in my company, I administer a simple 50-question test to on basic electrical theory (i.e., Ohm's Law, Kirchoff's Law, Watt's Law, et cetera). Those who pass the test (e.g., 35 or more correct answers) move on to the personal interview; those who do not pass are thanked and invited to try again on the next job posting.
I do not hire based on looks, personality, or religious/political affiliation, but on merit instead.
I have been a whistleblower before at a different teaching job. It did not end well, as I was fired for doing the right thing in reporting attempted illegal chemical dumping to officials. It almost cost me my career as a chemist. Sometimes you have to wait until the end of your rope to get your say.
_________________
The mere fact that science may not yet adequately explain an object, event, or experience does not mean the immediate explanation should automatically default to a conspiratorial, extraterrestrial, paranormal, or supernatural cause.
I am thinking with all of the arguments around classes being racist, maybe we should just cancel all further school attendance as a mandatory requirement. If math is racist against minorities, it must also mean phys Ed is racist against whites. And driver's ed is prejudice against people with certain disabilities.
One could reasonably claim that the entire educational system is ableist, in that only those who are capable of learning have any possibility of success. So then what happens?
Autodidacticism and home-schooling for those who are willing and able to undertake these efforts.
As for the rest ... there is always going to be a demand for manual labor. Who needs to learn how to operate heavy construction equipment when there are plenty of shovels to go around?
Man ... my sarcasm gene is really getting a workout today!
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The mere fact that science may not yet adequately explain an object, event, or experience does not mean the immediate explanation should automatically default to a conspiratorial, extraterrestrial, paranormal, or supernatural cause.
My impression is that by far the worst real issue when it comes to racism in education in the US is gerrymandering.
How would changing the rule from precise to close enough not be gerrymandering?
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The mere fact that science may not yet adequately explain an object, event, or experience does not mean the immediate explanation should automatically default to a conspiratorial, extraterrestrial, paranormal, or supernatural cause.
