Page 6--Friday, September 14, 1979-The Michigan Daily OD0 o'I A- dft / v frirnt I THE n-A52 dada. Planet Cair/52 Gi VAN MORRISON Includes Bright Side Of The Road Full Force Gale /Angeliou It's All InThe Game L The M i 599 699 tape (8.96 list) Study blames 'back to basics' for drouuino math test scores NEW YORK (UPI)-Math students are trying harder and doing worse, ac- cording to a report issued yesterday which puts the blame on the back-to- basics movement. The National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) report on math, funded by a division of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, claims: " Kids show ability at addition, sub- traction, multiplication, division. The report doesn't say how much of the credit for this goes to pocket calculators. " But decimals, fractions, and per- centages stump them. And word problems-the kind that come up in everyday life-dumbfound them. This is more true today than it was five years ago, according to the report fun- ded by HEW's Institute of Education. OVERALL, THE report claims, mathematical achievement is declining-which makes this report another piece of evidence being cited by those who contend that the nation's schools may be failing. SAT (Scholastic Aptitude Test) scores dipping more than 20 points over the last decade are 17 17i i - RY COODER Includes Ltle Siste ThcVeryThingThat Makes~ou R ihMakes M ocr Down In Hollywood 'Look aC anny Run R P-r1( in 4 99' P 54 tape (7.98 list) Come Celebrate Briarwood Movies' First Rocky Horror Anniversary Bop TidlYoumpop the biggest sign. About 71,000 students took part in the assessment of math ability among the nation's 9-, 13-, and 17-year-olds. Through such scientific samples, the NAEP has been measuring progress in 10 subjects in the nation's schools since 1969. The math assessment took several years and was administered by Research Triangle Institute in Raleigh, N.C. TO GET A handle on math w progress-or lack of it-analysts com- pared math achievement between the, first NAEP math survey in 1973 and the 1978 one. Shirley Hill, President of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, said the reports reinforce warnings that narrowing the math curriculum in the back-to-basics movement-pushing.1 addition, subtraction, division;,, multiplications-would be at the expenr- se of problem solving.',, "There is great alarm over the lack, of skill in computation in decimals and: percents shown by this assessment. But:. I am far more concerned about the lack; of ability in problem solving. All arein creasingly important to be; knowledgeable consumers. "AND AS THE calculator becomes an indispensible tool the understanding., and use of decimals assumes a more, , prominent place in problem solving." "It is obvious that there is little benefit to be gained by concentrating extraordinary efforts on computing skills and minimal competencies if out graduates cannot effectively apply mathematics in the real world-solving,, everyday problems," Hill said. Hill, professor of mathematics education at the University of Missouri,. Kansas City, said: 4 "Throughout the report there is evidence students proceed mechanically and thoughtlessly through problems, seeking a familiar route or a rigid rule to apply." 499 LP 549 tape (7.98 list) SIRE 4 9 9 L- LP oe 549 tape (7.98 list) everyday. low 599k '0WO99, prices- 6" tape (8.98 list) Vr A e / ~Record St x 11 Q SS 5 4;4, tP, _jP MIdkF I q r7 -if tore A NN ~z44ppe5 523 E. Liberty 994- 8031 M-Sa. 10-9 Sun 12-8 Tape Store 5141/2 E. William (upstairs) 668-1776 M-Sa. 12:30-6 This Friday and Saturday WITH SHOWS AT 12:00 MIDNIGHT AND 2:00 AMI THAT'S RIGHT 2:00 AM (after the bars close 1) Join the Business Staff r ' .. ACKSO E p, TrPROM o k ; r. x..r s 9 r a ''irk'"! tk , r t u x rd inprerecno te e'gi ate b s th fst lCg~ welad dosh"'g! y eos. 5tjre to be in cantntendY im cito a bi caris p on t Get ba o de. aOS ' ci' workm Aur SouThe n ge M OakSha 0 o Jcldes