Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM)
education has been a buzz phrase in education for at least a quarter century.
Anchored in a concern that America’s edge in technological innovation was in
danger of being lost because of a lack of technologically competent
individuals, STEM seeks to reinvigorate teaching and learning about these four
interrelated disciplinary fields at all levels of American education.
STEM advocates usually had little to say about the liberal
arts, and those involved in teaching the liberal arts usually had little to say
about STEM, except to more than occasionally lament why they couldn’t get some
of the money being given to evolving STEM programs. Without entering into what
has at times devolved into a bitter debate, in one important way STEM
fundamentally depends on the arts – pedagogy.
For all the emphasis on involving students in STEM programs,
there can be no question that unless the STEM disciplines are taught in a way
that interest students and successfully educate them, the entire enterprise is
for naught.
To accomplish this, the highest likelihood of success is to
be achieved by thinking about how these subjects have been taught in the past,
and how that body of historical information, a catalog of what worked, and what
didn’t work, can inform and improve teaching in the present and future.
First Lessons in Numbers in their Natural Order, by John H. French, 1874. |
Standard Service Arithmetics: Grade Five, by Scott, Foresman, and Company, 1927. |
Grade school books became a highly profitable, and often quite standardized product. Scott, Foresman, and Company’s 1927 Standard Service Arithmetics: Grade 5 seems a nice example of the development of grade school books in the first few decades of the twentieth century. The volume was part of the company’s “standard mathematical service,” edited by George Myers.
Other books in the collection show how teachers were taught
to teach the subject. The growth of “normal schools” in the late nineteenth
century, institutions of learning designed to educate teachers (of which
Central Michigan was originally one), spawned a new market for more advanced books.
The Normal Mental Arithmetic by
Edward Brooks, published in 1869, was an early example of book designed to sell
to this market, while An Arithmetic for
High Schools and Normal Schools, published in 1902, moved into an already
established market.
Books were also written to meet the needs of special
communities. How to Become Quick at
Figures; Comprising the Shortest, Quickest, and Best Methods of Business
Calculations, tells the potential buyer everything one needs to know about
the contents of the book.
Although the principal use of the collection is to discover
how arithmetic has been taught over time, sometimes the books offer social
insights that go well beyond that subject.
For example, Charles Davies Primary Arithmetic, published originally in 1855 and republished in 1883, included a bit of mathematical history. Lesson IV
noted that “the ten
figures of Arithmetic were first used in Arabia.” The next sentence is both
stereotypical and a historical, “The Arabs are a wandering people, live in
tents, [and] have fine horses and camels.” Nevertheless, a child might wonder
how these wandering people in their tents came upon the concept of Arabic
numbers?
An Arithmetic for High Schools and Normal Schools, by Benj. Sanborn & Co., 1902. |
Primary Arithmetic, by Charles Davies, 1855. |
Dr. Clason’s gift opens up both social questions and
questions that apply directly to the success of today’s STEM programs. We are
extraordinarily thankful to him for this gift.