“Music class is where we take out our staff paper, our teacher puts some notes on the board, and we copy them or transpose them into a different key. We have to make sure to get the clefs and key signatures right, and our teacher is very picky about making sure we fill in our quarter-notes completely. One time we had a chromatic scale problem and I did it right, but the teacher gave me no credit because I had the stems pointing the wrong way.”
In their wisdom, educators soon realize that even very young children can be given this kind of musical instruction. In fact it is considered quite shameful if one’s third-grader hasn’t completely memorized his circle of fifths. “I’ll have to get my son a music tutor. He simply won’t apply himself to his music homework.
“To tell you the truth, most students just aren’t very good at music. They are bored in class, their skills are terrible, and their homework is barely legible. Most of them couldn’t care less about how important music is in today’s world; they just want to take the minimum number of music courses and be done with it. I guess there are just music people and non-music people. I had this one kid, though, man was she sensational! Her sheets were impeccable— every note in the right place, perfect calligraphy, sharps, flats, just beautiful. She’s going to make one hell of a musician someday.”
The way we teach math is wrong. Students are taught to memorize formulas instead of taught formulas to go in their toolbox to solve problems. And because K through 12 is all memorization and repetition, students then spend undergrad unlearning all the damage that's been done. Only when they're in upper division courses or graduate school do they get to do actual math.
If we taught music or art like we taught math, there would be fewer artists or musicians.
The Mathematician's Lament
The way we teach math is wrong. Students are taught to memorize formulas instead of taught formulas to go in their toolbox to solve problems. And because K through 12 is all memorization and repetition, students then spend undergrad unlearning all the damage that's been done. Only when they're in upper division courses or graduate school do they get to do actual math.
If we taught music or art like we taught math, there would be fewer artists or musicians.
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