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What the Schools Teach and Might Teach by John Franklin Bobbitt
page 36 of 80 (45%)
to present the question as one which the city needs to investigate.
The present practice, in Cleveland as elsewhere, reveals
inconsistency. In one or the other of the schools a wrong course is
probably being followed. The current tendency in public education
is toward agreement with the principle enunciated by the Cleveland
Educational Commission, and toward a growing and consistent
application of it.

Differentiation in the mathematics of different classes of pupils is
necessary. The public schools ought to give the same mathematics to
all up to that level where the need is common to all. Beyond that
point, mathematics needs to be adapted to the probable future
activities of the individual. There are those who will need to reach
the higher levels of mathematical ability. Others will have no such
need.

There is a growing belief that even for those who are in need of
algebra the subject is not at present organized in desirable ways. It
is thought that, on the one hand, it should be knit up in far larger
measure with practical matters, and on the other, it should be
developed in connection with geometry and trigonometry. The technical
high schools of Cleveland have adopted this form of organization.
Their mathematics is probably greatly in advance of that of the
academic schools.



GEOMETRY

Form study should begin in the kindergarten, and it should develop
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