The high school years are a time
of major transition. Students enter high school as young teenagers, grappling
with issues of identity and with their own mental and physical capacities. In
grades 9–12, they develop in multiple ways—becoming more autonomous and yet
more able to work with others, becoming more reflective, and developing the
kinds of personal and intellectual competencies that they will take into the
workplace or into postsecondary education.
These Standards describe an
ambitious foundation of mathematical ideas and applications intended for all
students. Through its emphasis on fundamental mathematical concepts and
essential skills, this foundation would give all students solid preparation for
work and citizenship, positive mathematical dispositions, and the conceptual
basis for further study. In grades 9–12, students should encounter new classes
of functions, new geometric perspectives, and new ways of analyzing data. They
should begin to understand aspects of mathematical form and structure, such as
that all quadratic functions share certain properties, as do all functions of
other classes—linear, periodic, or exponential. Students should see the
interplay of algebra, geometry, statistics, probability, and discrete
mathematics and various ways that mathematical phenomena can be represented.
Through their high school experiences, they stand to develop deeper
understandings of the fundamental mathematical concepts of function and
relation, invariance, and transformation. »
In high school, students should
build on their prior knowledge, learning more-varied and more-sophisticated
problem-solving techniques. They should increase their abilities to visualize,
describe, and analyze situations in mathematical terms. They need to learn to
use a wide range of explicitly and recursively defined functions to model the
world around them. Moreover, their understanding of the properties of those
functions will give them insights into the phenomena being modeled. Their
understanding of statistics and probability could provide them with ways to
think about a wide range of issues that have important social implications,
such as the advisability of publicizing anecdotal evidence that can cause
health scares or whether DNA "fingerprinting" should be considered
strong or weak evidence.
Secondary school students need
to develop increased abilities in justifying claims, proving conjectures, and
using symbols in reasoning. They can be expected to learn to provide carefully
reasoned arguments in support of their claims. They can practice making and
interpreting oral and written claims so that they can communicate effectively
while working with others and can convey the results of their work with clarity
and power. They should continue to develop facility with such technological
tools as spreadsheets, data-gathering devices, computer algebra systems, and
graphing utilities that enable them to solve problems that would require large
amounts of computational time if done by hand. Massive amounts of
information—the federal budget, school-board budgets, mutual-fund values, and
local used-car prices—are now available to anyone with access to a networked
computer (Steen 1997). Facility with technological tools helps students analyze
these data. A great deal is demanded of students in the program proposed here,
but no more than is necessary for full quantitative literacy.
All students are expected to
study mathematics each of the four years that they are enrolled in high school,
whether they plan to pursue the further study of mathematics, to enter the workforce,
or to pursue other postsecondary education. The focus on conceptual
understanding provides the underpinnings for a wide range of careers as well as
for further study, as Hoachlander (1997, p. 135) observes:
Most advanced
high school mathematics has rigorous, interesting applications in the work
world. For example, graphic designers routinely use geometry. Carpenters apply
the principles of trigonometry in their work, as do surveyors, navigators, and
architects.... Algebra pervades computing and business modeling, from everyday
spreadsheets to sophisticated scheduling systems and financial planning
strategies. Statistics is a mainstay for economists, marketing experts,
pharmaceutical companies, and political advisers.
With the experience proposed here
in making connections and solving problems from a wide range of contexts,
students will learn to adapt flexibly to the changing needs of the workplace.
The emphasis on facility with technology will result in students‘ ability to
adapt to the increasingly technological work environments they will face in the
years to come. By learning to think and communicate effectively in mathematics,
students will be better prepared for changes in the workplace that increasingly
demand teamwork, collaboration, and communication (U.S. Department of Labor
1991; Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics 1996). Note that these
skills are also needed increasingly by people who will pursue careers » in mathematics or science. With its emphasis on
fundamental concepts, thinking and reasoning, modeling, and communicating, the
core is a foundation for the study of more-advanced mathematics. Consider, for
example, the recommendations for precalculus courses generated at the Preparing
for a New Calculus conference (Gordon et al. 1994, p. 56):
Courses
designed to prepare students for the new calculus should:
- cover fewer topics ... with
more emphasis on fundamental concepts.
- place less emphasis on complex
manipulative skills.
- teach students to think and
reason mathematically, not just to perform routine operations....
- emphasize modeling the real
world and develop problem-solving skills.
- make use of all appropriate
calculator and computer technologies....
- promote experimentation and
conjecturing.
- provide a solid foundation in
mathematics that prepares students to read and learn mathematical material
at a comparable level on their own.
A central theme of Principles
and Standards for School Mathematics is connections. Students develop a
much richer understanding of mathematics and its applications when they can
view the same phenomena from multiple mathematical perspectives. One way to
have students see mathematics in this way is to use instructional materials
that are intentionally designed to weave together different content strands.
Another means of achieving content integration is to make sure that courses
oriented toward any particular content area (such as algebra or geometry) contain
many integrative problems—problems that draw on a variety of aspects of
mathematics, that are solvable using a variety of methods, and that students
can access in different ways.
High school students with
particular interests could study mathematics that extends beyond what is
recommended here in various ways. One approach is to include in the program
material that extends these ideas in depth or sophistication. Students who
encounter these kinds of enriched curricula in heterogeneous classes will tend
to seek different levels of understanding. They will, over time, learn new ways
of thinking from their peers. Other approaches make use of supplementary
courses. For instance, students could enroll in additional courses concurrent
with the program. Or the material proposed in these Standards could be included
in a three-year program that allows students to take supplementary courses in
the fourth year. In any of these approaches, the curriculum can be designed so
that students can complete the foundation proposed here and choose from
additional courses such as computer science, technical mathematics, statistics,
and calculus. Whatever the approach taken, all students learn the same core
material while some, if they wish, can study additional mathematics consistent
with their interests and career directions.
These Standards
are demanding. It will take time, patience, and skill to implement the vision
they represent. The content and pedagogical demands of curricula aligned with
these Standards will require extended and sustained professional development
for teachers and a large degree of administrative support. Such efforts are
essential. We owe our children no less than a high degree of quantitative
literacy and mathematical knowledge that prepares them for citizenship, work,
and further study.
摘自NCTM