President Obama announced a new Math and Science Initiative,
alarming us that we are 21st in math among the 25 ranked industrial
nations. Surprising and pathetic, is not it? Why should we care? Why is
math important? First of all, it is the foundation for our
technological progress. Everything, from medicine and space program to
sports relies on math to analyze, simulate and improve. We are
desperately fighting to be ahead in all these fields. Second, in the
global, competitive world we live in, being 21st out of 25 means not
getting the jobs we want. And nowadays almost every job utilizes math
in some extent. Dentists play with computer models to simulate
imperfections of our bite and new dumpster trucks come equipped with
robotic arms.
Another reason is a pretty good lifestyle that math expertise may allow for. A recent CareerBuilder survey reported by CNN
rated mathematician as the best career, taking into account income and
stress, with mathematicians earning $94,960 on average in 2008. Fluency
in the language of math may give your children not only the attractive
financial comfort, it will help open the whole world for them. Math is
a universal language you can speak and work with anywhere on Earth and
in Space.
What can we, parents, do in order to help our kids get
ahead of our poor 21st ranking? You can start by equipping them with
the right attitude towards math. By presenting math to them as a toy, a
tool and a friend. Something as hip and respectable as sports.
Something exciting and important, worth working hard for.
You can find a lot of fun math stories, family puzzles and tips for parents on www.TheMathMom.com
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