I don't know how they teach the SI but its done in the science classes rather 
than in math classes.  I did prepare 5 pages to get hem started.  They included 
an intro page, a page  on how to write the SI, a page was on the ISO date/time 
format etc. The school put them on its web site.  

Also, I referred them to the USMA web site since it is more practical and 
useful for educational purposes than the NIST site URL which I also included.  
Two grandkids who were in different school verified that the SI was taught 
beginning the first day of their science classes in the fall term.  Our Rotary 
club also published the USMA SI UNITS chart in poster size and has given them 
to schools, libraries and others.

Regards,  Stan Doore



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Daniel Jackson 
  To: U.S. Metric Association 
  Sent: Sunday, March 11, 2007 12:37 AM
  Subject: [USMA:38128] Re: metric in the classroom


  May I inquire as to how they teach metric?  Do the students learn the rules 
of SI like they would the rules of grammar and spelling?  Do they learn it 
practically, or do they learn it as a conversion to/from non-metric (FFU)?  How 
they learn it will influence how well they learn it and how much they will use 
it in the real world.

  Dan 


  ----- Original Message ----
  From: STANLEY DOORE <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
  Sent: Saturday, March 10, 2007 3:24:05 PM
  Subject: Re: [USMA:38112] metric in the classroom


  Schools in Montgomery County MD now are teaching and using the SI exclusively 
in their science classes and courses.  And, this is beginning to spread 
throughout the State of Maryland.  The USMA has a great SI chart which can be 
used.

  This effort began several years ago when I suggested to the Superintendent of 
the 138,000 student school system to do it.  He agreed and now it's a reality.

  This means that all students graduating from high school will be SI 
conversant since science is required for high school graduation purposes.  This 
is the fastest and most practical way of teaching and using the SI.   The kids 
can help parents when shopping as the US allows metric only labeling on 
products.

  Until you and others  take action within your local  school systems,  little 
progress will be made.  Arm-waving and talk about the SI and going metric and 
its advantages is non-productive.  Only action like we've taken here will.

  Regards,  Stan Doore



    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Daniel Jackson 
    To: U.S. Metric Association 
    Sent: Saturday, March 10, 2007 11:54 AM
    Subject: [USMA:38112] metric in the classroom


    I think America's schools and students need a rude wake-up call.  They need 
to be told point blank that their metric ignorance and anti-metric bias is a 
motivating factor in businesses choosing to have their products made in metric 
elsewhere in the world.  High paying manufacturing jobs are disappearing and 
have been disappearing for some time forcing Americans to live on less pay, 
excessive borrowing to maintain a middle class life style and working on the 
average 60 to 70 h per week at a low paying job.  Then to rub salt into the 
wounds, the products once made in inches in the US are now made in metric 
elsewhere and imported back to the US.  The difference is they are made by 
metric loving people and not made by metric haters.  Yet, the metric haters 
still buy them.

    The reality of this situation may scare enough people to make them realize 
that metric is needed to keep the US from descending into a third world economy 
with poverty for everyone.  Teachers that are anti-metric aid the problem and 
should be removed from teaching positions and have their certificates revoked.  

    Dan


    Hopefully, the response of the class is telling of the general attitude in 
the country.  It's not too bad people don't care one way or another, 
considering that the alternative is shrill resistance.

    Remek


    On 3/9/07, Mike Millet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
      I think all the discussion worked as my professor has reluctantly given 
up the fight and agreed that we can use SI in papers, although she is still not 
happy about it.  I think part of it was that several other speeches also used 
SI units, particularly ones dealing with scientific studies, and she also asked 
the class to take a vote on it and the class agreed it really didn't care which 
unit the reports were in. 

      Mike 



      On 3/7/07, Pat Naughtin < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
        On 2007 03 8 9:42 AM, "Scott Hudnall" < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

        > Looks like my  arguments are bolstered by Bill Gates.
        > 
        > http://www.komotv.com/news/6362592.html


        Dear Scott and All,

        You might be interested to read a letter that I sent to Steve Jobs 
(with a copy to Bill Gates) in December last year.

        Pat Naughtin
        PO Box 305
        Belmont, Geelong, 3216
        Victoria, Australia
        [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

        Steven P Jobs
        Chief Executive Officer and Director
        Apple
        1 Infinite Loop
        Cupertino, CA 95014
         
        Dear Steve Jobs,

        I noticed that your company has released yet another series of products 
designed and built using metric units, such as nanometres and micrometres, and 
then designated and sold with the screens described as 'inches'. I am writing 
to let you know that I believe that this practice is having a devastating 
effect on the education of children and on the economies of nations all around 
the world. 

        Consider the children.

        Whenever you use the word 'inch' you are asking each and every child in 
the world to learn about the old measurements used before the world upgraded to 
the metric system. You are aware that the USA is batting way below its 
development possibilities simply because every child in the USA has to learn 
about inches and their fractions and conversion calculations just so they can 
understand their computer screen size (and the inch defaults left lying about 
by Bill Gates in Microsoft Word). See my submission to President George W 
Bush's 'National Math Panel' (attached). 

        What are the costs?

        In 1980, the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) surveyed its 
members after 15 years of British metrication. They found that:



          ... the extra cost of continuing to work in dual systems of measuring 
was around £5 000 million every year. (This was about 9 % of the 1980 UK GDP) 


        For the large British companies on which the survey was based, the 
increased production cost for each company who used dual measures averaged at 
11 % of the company's gross profit, and 14 % of its net profit when compared to 
a fully metric CBI company. 

        If the lowest of these percentages (9 %) is applied to the USA economy 
as a whole and we make a bold, but not wild, assumption that it costs about 9 % 
of gross turnover to use dual measurements (metric and U.S. Customary) then 
based on a 2005 estimated Gross Domestic Product for the USA of 12.735 trillion 
dollars it currently costs the USA about 1.15 trillion dollars per year to use 
dual measures instead of metric units.

        I have used Apple products and Microsoft products since the 1970s and I 
have always regarded Apple Computers as an extremely progressive company. It 
saddens me greatly when you use a deeply flawed and seemingly dishonest 
labelling practice for marketing your computers. 

        When you decide to, once again, be a progressive company could you 
please form your policy around the ideas of direct metrication, using 
nanometres, micrometres, millimetres, and metres. This will be of direct and 
immediate benefit to the Apple Company, children's education all over the 
world, and to the economies of companies and nations wherever Apple computers 
are sold. 

        Best regards for your inch free future,
         
         Pat Naughtin
        Copies:                  Bill Gates, Microsoft Corporation, One 
Microsoft Way, Redmond, WA 98052-6399
                                      Managing Director, Apple Computer 
Australia Pty Ltd, PO Box A2629, Sydney South NSW 1235




        Submission to National Math Panel by Pat Naughtin, Geelong, Australia 


        Pat Naughtin
        PO Box 305 Belmont,
        Geelong, VIC
        Australia
        61 3 5241 2008
        [EMAIL PROTECTED]
          

        National Math Panel
        Department of Education
        USA
        [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

        Ladies and Gentlemen,

        I am writing in response to Executive Order 13398 and your inquiry into 
shortfalls in mathematics education in the USA. 

        Specifically, I am responding to Section 1 of the Executive Order 
13398: National Mathematics Advisory Panel that reads:



          To help keep America competitive, support American talent and 
creativity, encourage innovation throughout the American economy, and help 
State, local, territorial, and tribal governments give the Nation's children 
and youth the education they need to succeed, it shall be the policy of the 
United States to foster greater knowledge of and improved performance in 
mathematics among American students. 


        I am aware that not being a citizen of the USA - I live in Geelong, 
Australia - could be seen as an impediment but I consider that I am a suitable 
respondent under:

        (iii) experts on matters relating to the policy set forth in section 1

        (v) such other individuals as the Panel deems appropriate or as the 
Secretary may direct

        or simply as a faraway foreign friend of the USA.

        I am aware that the USA faces significant issues in the area of 
mathematics:
        ·   Almost half of American 17-year-olds do not have the basic 
understanding of math needed to qualify for a production associate's job at a 
modern auto plant. 
        ·   On the most recent PISA test, American 15-year-olds performed below 
the international average in mathematics literacy and problem-solving.
        ·   Only seven percent of fourth-and eighth-graders achieved the 
advanced level on the 2003 TIMSS test.
        ·   Students from low-income families who acquire strong math skills by 
the eighth-grade are 10 times more likely to finish college than peers of the 
same socio-economic background who do not. 
        ·   USA students are currently performing below their international 
peers on math and science assessments.

        And I agree with Secretary Spellings when she says that there is a 
'need for today's high school graduates to have solid math skills - whether 
they are proceeding to college or going straight into the workforce'. 

        I am writing because I believe that almost all of these issues and 
problems will evaporate once you have adequate metrication policies and 
practices in place. I am writing to encourage you to support the use of direct 
metrication in USA schools. 

        I recommend that your committee considers how best to encourage the use 
of the metric system in schools, to discourage the use of old pre-metric 
measures and, critically, to avoid conversions between measuring methods 
altogether. 
        Let me refer back to the beginning of the 20th century when Alexander 
Graham Bell (1847/1922) said:


          All the difficulties in the metric system are in translating from one 
system to the other, but the moment you use the metric system alone there is no 
difficulty. 


        That in a nutshell is a major problem of the current mathematical 
education system. You have just spent 100 years trying to translate. 'from one 
system to the other' with little success. I suggest that you abandon this 
approach. 

        Speaking of Alexander Graham Bell, I would like to recall an address 
that Dr. Bell gave to a House committee in support of a bill to switch to the 
metric system. This was exactly 100 years ago, in 1906. Fortunately, his 
speech, 'Our Heterogeneous System of Weights and Measures' was recorded in the 
March, 1906 issue of The National Geographic Magazine, and can be found at: 
http://lamar.colostate.edu/~hillger/laws/bell-1906-03.html 

        There is also further, more recent, evidence that this approach does 
not work.

        Richard P Phelps in his paper, 'The Case for U.S. Metric Conversion 
Now' in Education Week (1992 December 9) estimated that each child in the USA 
currently spends around a year of their life at school learning how to convert 
from old measures to other old measures, or how to convert from metric units 
back to old pre-metric measures. In this article, Richard P. Phelps states: 


          It (USA education system) teaches two systems of measurement in the 
schools and, the confusion from learning two systems aside, there is a cost to 
the time spent in teaching two systems. A full year of mathematics instruction 
is lost to the duplication of effort. 


        You can view Phelp's article at: 
http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/1992/12/09/14phelps.h12.html .

        When students from the USA are compared with students from other 
nations it is no wonder that they compare unfavourably given this (conversion) 
handicap.

        Lorelle Young, President of the United States Metric Association 
(founded in 1916) estimates that about 60 % of industry in the USA is now 
metric. As children who are currently in school leave for the world of work, 
they will mostly work in industries that are already predominately metric. As 
their schools have not prepared them to be in the workforce they will have to 
learn the mathematics they need 'on the job'. 

        Personally, I disagree with Lorelle Young; I think that her estimate is 
too low. I travelled extensively in the USA from March to May last year and I 
found factory after factory internally using metric units for all their work 
and then, as I put it in an article in the USMA newsletter Metric Today, ' 
Dumbed it down at the door' of their factory so that others would not know that 
they preferred metric units internally. From an educator's point of view you 
need to investigate how much of this 'hidden metric' will be relevant to your 
students. Surely one of your goals is to prepare student for work in industry 
in the USA. 

        Somewhat facetiously, I wrote about my experiences in the USA in an 
article entitled, 'Don't use metric!' that you can download as a pdf file from 
http://www.metricationmatters.com/articles. You might find this amusing but I 
wrote it with serious intent - to highlight the fact that the USA is now all 
metric.

        There is now no activity in the USA that is not wholly based on the 
metric system.

        Sure many deny this, but while:
        ·   all medicine is totally metric,
        ·   all food values are totally metric,
        ·   every car, truck, and tractor is totally metric, and
        ·   every yard that a football team achieves is defined legally as 
exactly 914.4 millimetres
        they don't have much room to manoeuvre.

        In his 1906 address to the House committee, Alexander Graham Bell said,


          Few people have any adequate conception of the amount of unnecessary 
labor involved in the use of our present weights and measures. 


        I believe that the cost of this 'unnecessary labor' is still with us. 
But I have seen few serious attempts to put a figure on this cost. My own 
researches have only found three attempts to answer this question. They are 
from Jos. V. Collins in 1915, Richard P. Phelps in 1992 (cited above), and some 
thoughts of my own in 2006. 

        In 1915, Collins in 'A metrical tragedy' estimated the cost of 
non-metrication at that time as 'a total annual loss of $315 000 000'. You can 
find a full transcript of Jos. V Collins' article at: 
http://www.worldwideschool.org/library/books/socl/education/AMetricalTragedy/Chap1.html
 

        Richard P Phelps estimated that, 'there is a cost to the time spent in 
teaching two systems. A full year of mathematics instruction is lost to the 
duplication of effort'. My estimate of the cost of this wasted effort in the 
schools of the USA is about 85 billion dollars per year based on the idea that 
10 % of the education budgets of the USA is wasted effort. 

        My own estimates of non-metrication costs in the USA are based on a 
Confederation of British Industry (CBI) survey of its members about metrication 
in 1980 - after 15 years of British metrication. They found that:


          ... the extra cost of continuing to work in dual systems of measuring 
was around £5 000 million every year (in the UK).


        For companies on which the survey was based, the increased production 
cost for each company who used dual measures averaged at 11% of the company's 
gross profit, and 14% of its net profit when compared to a fully metric CBI 
company. 

        If the percentage (9 %) is applied to the USA economy as a whole and we 
make a bold, but not wild, assumption that it costs about 9 % of gross turnover 
to use dual measurements (metric and U.S. Customary) then based on a 2005 
estimated Gross Domestic Product for the USA of $12.735 trillion dollars it 
costs the USA about 1.15 trillion dollars per year to use dual measures instead 
of metric units.

        My estimate sounded so outrageous that I was moved to compare it with 
Jos. V Collins' and Richard P Phelp's estimates of costs to the USA economy. In 
1915, Collins wrote 'Total annual loss of $315 000 000' could be attributed per 
year to non-metrication in the USA. If you allow for inflation between 1915 and 
2005, Collin's figure for annual losses becomes $6 100 000 000 per year. If 
Richard P Phelp's estimate of 10 % wasted costs in education were applied to 
the whole economy, the loss would be about $1.27 trillion per year. To 
paraphrase the USA Senator Everett McKinley Dirksen (1896/1969): 

        a trillion this year, and a trillion next year, pretty soon adds up to 
real money. 


        I wish the National Mathematics Advisory Panel every success with their 
deliberations, and I sincerely hope that you will achieve the goals as laid out 
in your charter. However, I don't think that you can achieve them unless you 
boldly confront the issues related to the international metric system. Please 
don't sweep it under the carpet yet again - I even doubt that your great nation 
can afford to do so. 

        Yours faithfully,

        Pat Naughtin
        2006-05-26

        P.S. If I can be of any further assistance to your committee please let 
me know. 

        Pat is the editor of the 'Numbers and measurement' chapter of the 
Australian Government Publishing Service 'Style manual - for writers, editors 
and printers'. He is a Member of the National Speakers Association of Australia 
and the International Federation of Professional Speakers. He is also 
recognised as a Lifetime Certified Advanced Metrication Specialist (LCAMS) with 
the United States Metric Association. You can find out more about him at 
http://wwwmetricationmatters.com 

         















      -- 
      "The boy is dangerous, they all sense it why can't you?" 




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