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For many, proving U.S. citizenship to vote could be costly and difficult; MA considers corporate tax increase to bolster public services; WI's Supreme Court race laced with cash, power, vast implications; Doctor shortages in VA lead to changes to licensing rules.

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Newly released Signalgate messages include highly classified data. Americans see legal political spending as corruption. Activists say cuts to Medicaid would hurt maternity care, and cuts and changed rules at Social Security are causing customer service problems.

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Rural folks face significant clean air and water risks due to EPA cutbacks, a group of policymakers is working to expand rural health care via mobile clinics, and a new study maps Montana's news landscape.

New survey asks why some high school kids don't like math

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Thursday, January 18, 2024   

American 15-year-olds rank 28th in the developed world for math skills on international assessments, and now a new study aims to find out why many teenagers are turned off by math.

Researchers from the nonprofit YouthTruth polled 90,000 students and found only 57% consider it important to learn math.

Jennifer de Forest, director of organizational learning for YouthTruth, noted students value a good relationship with their teacher.

"Those students would describe, for example, that their teachers set up classroom routines that require them to ask questions in a really interesting light," de Forest explained. "Those teachers also created classrooms that recognize that learning math is a social process."

The study also found students do want to learn math they can use in a job or in everyday life but often do not understand the practical applications. The survey also found just 47% of students find their math assignments interesting.

Elisha Arillaga Smith, math education and research fellow at Just Equations, said teachers need to encourage students to push through when solving a difficult math problem.

"The fact that only 61% of students indicate that they keep trying, when math gets hard, one of the reasons that that's really problematic is because that's one of the main tools that you need math to actually be able to be successful," Arillaga Smith emphasized.

The survey also showed just 46 % of students indicated they feel comfortable asking questions in their math class.

Disclosure: YouthTruth contributes to our fund for reporting on Education, Philanthropy, and Youth Issues. If you would like to help support news in the public interest, click here.


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