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Ohio students face tougher math requirements
Jan. 4, 2010 (AP): Ohio high school students entering their
freshman year this fall will face tougher math requirements as
part of a growing effort by Ohio and other states to better
prepare students for college and careers in the global economy.
Ohio will require the incoming freshmen to complete four units
of math for graduation, compared to the three now required.
Another new requirement for graduation is that one of those four
units must be Algebra II.
``With Algebra II, students will get a stronger background in
math going into college, and career-wise—with technology growing
at such a fast pace—there is a demand for students to know more
math,'' Scott Blake, a spokesman for the Ohio Department of
Education, said Monday.
But even Algebra I can prove to be a major hurdle for
many students. A 2006 study at Florida International University
found that students who fail Algebra I are four times
more likely to drop out of high school than those who passed.
At least five states currently require four units, while at
least 12 states, including Ohio, require four units of math with
future graduating classes, according to the Education Commission
of the States.
The new Ohio requirements that will affect students graduating
in 2014 were part of legislation signed into law in 2007
establishing the Ohio Core curriculum aimed at improving student
achievement in core areas such as math and science.
The Ohio Department of Education is trying to assist districts
concerned about helping students meet the new requirements.
``We're trying to build support for districts to answer those
kinds of questions,'' said Brad Findell, director of the
department's Mathematics Initiative.
Achieve's American Diploma Project Assessment Consortium
based in Washington, D.C., has created Algebra I and II
end-of-course exams to learn whether students have mastered the
subject and are prepared for higher-level mathematics.
Ohio was one of five states that participated in the first
administration of the Algebra I exam in spring 2009.
Students were tested and scored in the categories of advanced,
proficient, basic and below basic. Of the 2,031 Ohio students
tested, 60.2 percent scored below basic.
One approach being used productively around the country to help
students consists of providing twice the amount of instruction
time during ninth-grade algebra, Findell said.
Educators say support for students struggling with algebra needs
to start as early as middle school and that those struggling the
most often did not master the basics in the lower grades.
``If you struggled with math all along, you've got an
accumulation of deficits that are following you all the way up
to that course,'' said Ultan Killean, who teaches geometry and
statistics at Wyoming High School in suburban Cincinnati.
Algebra I
has been taught in some middle schools, especially to students
who excel in math.
One eighth-grader at the private Guardian Angels School in
Cincinnati who already takes Algebra I at a nearby high
school thinks more high school math will help students with
college math.
``You get more experience with it,'' Wall said. ``When you take
a year off, you seem to forget a little bit of what you did.''
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