General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: How would you answer this test question? From a 1st grade Common Core test. [View all]Ms. Toad
(38,203 posts)many elementary certified school teachers (which extend through 8th or 9th grade many places) didn't even really understand the older school material. I spent quite a few hours working with college students (and in some instances graduates working on Master's Degrees in education) trying to help them learn enough basic arithmetic (e.g. the four functions with decimals and fractions) to pass the tests they needed to be certified to teach elementary school. And anyone certified to teach elementary school (in most states) may teach middle school math - which includes 1-2 years of algebra and geometry (depending on the sequence, and depending on how many AP classes are offered.
Rote memorization of math facts should never have been sufficient to teach elementary school math. The two differences now are that it is explicitly not enough (that's what the Common Core, and other less formal movements toward comprehension, is about) - AND - Testing companies have seen an opening where they can make money and are apparently flooding the market preying on the lack of understanding of anything beyond rote memorization (and the fear associated with it). So when A (rote memorization) meets B (offers of bright shiny tests), A doesn't know enough to be able to say, "The emperor has no clothes." (And, those in A who do recognize it are apparently forbidden from holding up the clothing for examination.)
I actually did go to the website to see if I could see if everything they offer is as bad as the few pages which are posted - and everything is behind a school-membership wall.