It's being introduced beginning with early grade science courses.  I am not 
familiar with all of the details to which you inquire.

I thought that getting it adopted in science classes and courses was a great 
first step forward.  However from you questions,  you seem to think that is in 
not enough.  Science doesn't have grade-level boundaries like schools have so 
the SI should be an integral apart of ALL science material because that's 
what's used worldwide including the US.

You don't give people the benefit that they can relate to products labeled in 
both metric and English units as most are now.  If what you say is true, then 
people haven't related to 35-mm film, two-liter soda and other containers and 
many other products on the shelf in markets today.

Don't be a negative thinker or a finder of excuses not to use the SI.  All you 
are doing is to try to derail going metric.  Just get the SI taught and used 
exclusively in ALL science classes and courses in schools and direct attention 
to the USMA's great web site.

Stan Doore.


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Daniel Jackson 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; U.S. Metric Association 
  Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sent: Sunday, March 11, 2007 10:51 AM
  Subject: Re: [USMA:38135] Re: NCTM Curriculum Focal Points


  In what year are science classes usually taught?  Would this be starting in 
9-th grade?  SI should be taught as soon as any reference to measurements is 
taught.  When and where are measurement subjects usually taught?  SI should be 
a part of that experience too.

  The problem with teaching SI as part of science classes, is that students may 
think SI can only be used as part of science.  So how is SI brought into other 
aspects of life?  Even though it may not be taught in math class, is it used in 
math class examples?  Is it used in geography class?  Is it used in history and 
language?  

  Is is used in shop and home economics classes?  This is where students would 
see a practical usage of metric.  It is nice that it is taught in the schools, 
but it also has to has to be used outside of science so the students don't 
leave school thinking metric is just a scientific tool and language and can't 
be used in daily activities in life.  

  Classes, like shop or if the school also offers courses in plumbing, auto 
mechanics, electrical, etc, the use of SI must be used there so that students 
see its usefulness in practical applications.  Is it used in these classes ever?

  Dan


  ----- Original Message ----
  From: STANLEY DOORE <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
  Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Sunday, March 11, 2007 6:44:25 AM
  Subject: [USMA:38135] Re: NCTM Curriculum Focal Points


  Thanks Pat.

  That's why the school system here moved teaching and using the SI to science 
classes from math classes.  Science classes are where the SI is needs to be 
taught and used exclusively to prepare kids for science and technology jobs.   
Math class is just conversion as you've shown.

  Stan Doore


  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


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