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Quantitative Reasoning in Religion and Other
Disciplines
Nathan D. GraweCarleton College
Serc.carleton.edu/quirk
With support from the US Department of Education’s Fund for the Improvement of Post-Secondary Education, the National Science Foundation, and the WM Keck Foundation.
Overview
What is QR? (20 minutes)How does QR show up in student work? (20 minutes)Assignment design principles (10 minutes)Assignment ideas(20 minutes)Break (5 minutes)(Assignment creation workshop)
What is QR?
The habit of mind to consider the power and limitations of quantitative evidence in the evaluation, construction, and communication of arguments in public, professional, and personal life.
What is QR?
Four facets of QR:1) QR requires a basic skill set
What is QR?
Four facets of QR:1) QR requires a basic skill set 2) QR demands application in context
"The test of numeracy, as of any literacy, is whether a person naturally
uses appropriate skills in many different contexts"
-National Council on Education and the Disciplines (2001)
What is QR?
Four facets of QR:1) QR requires a basic skill set 2) QR demands application in context 3) QR involves argument
What is QR?
Four facets of QR:1) QR requires a basic skill set 2) QR demands application in context 3) QR involves argument“Deploying numbers skillfully is as
important to communication as deploying verbs.”
-Max Frankel, The New York Times
Magazine
What is QR?
Four facets of QR:1) QR requires a basic skill set 2) QR demands application in context 3) QR involves argument“Numbers [are] the principal language
of public argument.” -BBC Program More or
Less
What is QR?
Four facets of QR:1) QR requires a basic skill set 2) QR demands application in context 3) QR involves argument4) QR is a habit of mind“[QR] is not a discipline but a way of
thinking….” -Lynn Steen
Achieving Quantitative Literacy
What is QR?
“…sophisticated reasoning with elementary mathematics more than elementary reasoning with sophisticated mathematics.”
-Lynn SteenAchieving Quantitative Literacy
What do the numbers show?
What do the numbers show?
Compared to what?
Compared to what?
Compared to what?
How representative is that?
How was the variable operationalized?
What’s the research design (correllational or experimental)?
Fact: Those who work with computers earn 15-20% more than others.
“Thus, computer training may, at least in the short run, be a profitable investment for public and private job training programs.”
What’s the research design (correllational or experimental)?
Other interesting returns:Calculator = 12.8%Telephone = 11.4%Pencil/Pen = 11.2%Work while sitting = 10.1%
Two Types of QR Use in Student Papers
Central Use:Use of numbers to address a central question, issue, or theme
Peripheral Use:Use of numbers to provide useful detail, enrich descriptions, present background, or establish frames of reference
Two Types of QR Use in Student Papers
The importance of the periphery:“Even for works that are not inherently quantitative, one or two numeric facts can help convey the importance or context of your topic.”
-Jane Miller
The Chicago Guide to Writing About Numbers
Examples from Student Writing
Example of QR-irrelevant paper:“The Maiden who Needs No Saving”—an analysis of Keat’s treatment of helplessness and power in “La Belle Dame Sans Merci”
Examples from Student WritingThesis: A synthesis of 3 alternative views on poverty provides a more complete picture than any 1 perspective alone.
Examples from Student WritingExcerpt #3
$192 billion $60 billion1/65th of GNP 1/230th of GNP
Examples from Student WritingTitle: “Les Banlieues d’Islam”
Thesis: French Muslims struggle to find an acceptable identity. A new “Euro-Islam” may address these complex political and social challenges.
Examples from Student Writing
Why the sciences can’t—and shouldn’t!—address QR
alone
"The interdisciplinary and contextual nature of [QR] cries out for a cross cutting approach."
-Lynn Steen
Achieving Quantitative Literacy
Why the sciences can’t—and shouldn’t!—address QR alone
“If [QR] remains the responsibility solely of mathematics departments—especially if it is caged into a single course such as ‘Math for Liberal Arts’—students will continue to see [QR] as something that happens only in the mathematics classroom.”
-Lynn Steen
Achieving Quantitative Literacy
Why the sciences can’t—and shouldn’t!—address QR alone“…numeracy is not something mastered in a single course….Thus quantitative material needs to permeate the curriculum, … so that students have opportunities to practice their skills and see how useful they can be in understanding a wide range of problems.”
-Derek Bok (2006)
“…authentic and enduring learning…can rarely succeed one course at a time.”
-Lee Shulman (1997)
Why the sciences can’t—and shouldn’t!—address QR
aloneFraction of students who believe quantitative skills will be very important or essential to their lives:
Natural and Social Sciences
Arts, Literature, & Humanities
Yes
YesNo
No
Evidence from Student Writing
Evidence from Student Writing
Evidence from Student Writing
Extent of QR in Papers for which QR was Centrally Relevant
NoneOne or Two PlacesExtensive
Evidence from Student Writing
Extent of QR in Papers for which QR was Peripherally Relevant
NoneOne or Two PlacesExtensive
Implementing Curricular Change
• Rhetorical slant on QR engages faculty across curriculum
QuIRK 18-month participation rateOverall: 65%Natural & Social Sciences: 75%Arts, Lit, & Humanities:55%
Implementing Curricular Change
Implementing Curricular Change
Implementing Curricular Change
Implementing Curricular Change
Implementing Curricular Change
Implementing Curricular Change
Start by articulating course learning goals
Use texts that exemplify QR Reverse engineer course, last
assignment first, using prior assignments as scaffolds
Treat QR-in-writing as a process Involve your reference librarians The Statistical Abstract of the US
Implementing Curricular Change
Provide a TIP and…Task asIll-structuredProblem
a RAFTRoleAudienceFormat (Genre)Task
Implementing Curricular Change
Example 1: An Ill-Structured Physics Lab
Example 2: English 109 Memo (estimation problem)
Example 3: Intro to Latina/o Studies Paper
Example 4: Exploring and Architectural Remodel
Implementing Curricular Change
Example 5: History Paper on India’s Colonial Census
Example 6: Environmental History Paper
Example 7: Development Economics Paper
Example 8: Native-American Literature Analysis
Implementing Curricular Change
Start by articulating course learning goals
Use texts that exemplify QR Reverse engineer course, last
assignment first, using prior assignments as scaffolds
Treat QR-in-writing as a process Involve your reference librarians
What’s at Stake?
“…Now everyone can obtain and consider data about the risks of medication, voting patterns in a locality, projections for the federal budget surplus, and an almost endless array of other concerns…. If individuals lack the ability to think numerically they cannot fully participate in civic life, thereby bringing into question the very basis of government of, by, and for the people.”
-Robert Orrill
“Mathematics, Numeracy, and Democracy”
Assignment Creation Workshop
Agenda: Read student papers and discuss
(Where are we starting from?) (45 minutes)
Assignment/Course Module Brainstorming (30 minutes)
Share Assignment Ideas/Wrap-Up(15 minutes)
References
Bok, Derek. 2006. Our Underachieving Colleges: A Candid Look at How Much Students Learn and Why They Should Be Learning More. Princeton University Press: Princeton, NJ.
Brakke, David F. 2003. "Addressing Societal and Workforce Needs," in Quantitative Literacy: Why Numeracy Matters for Schools and Colleges, Bernard L. Madison and Lynn Arthur Steen, eds. Princeton, NJ: National Council on Education and the Disciplines.
Cohen, I. Bernard. 2005. The Triumph of Numbers: How Counting Shaped Modern Life. W.W. Norton & Company: New York.
De Lange, Jan. 2001. "Mathematics for Literacy" in Mathematics and Democracy: The Case for Quantitative Literacy, Lynn Arthur Steen, ed. Princeton, NJ: National Council on Education and the Disciplines.
Frankel, Max. 1995. “Word and Image; Innumercy,” New York Times, March 5.
Gray, Steven. 2009. “Report Says 1 in 50 U.S. Kids Are Homeless,” Time, March 10.
Hughes-Hallett, Deborah J. 2001. "The Role of Mathematics Courses in the Development of Quantitative Literacy" in Mathematics and Democracy: The Case for Quantitative Literacy, Lynn Arthur Steen, ed. Princeton, NJ: National Council on Education and the Disciplines.
References (Cont.)
Miller, Jane E. 2004. The Chicago Guide to Writing about Numbers. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
More or Less, British Broadcasting Corporation radio program. Retrieved April 27, 2007, from http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/more_or_less/1628489.stm.
National Council on Education and the Disciplines. 2001. Mathematics and Democracy: The Case for Quantitative Literacy. Washington DC: Mathematical Association of America.
New York Times. 2005. “Many Women at Elite Colleges Set Career Path to Motherhood,” September 20.
New York Times. 2007. “The Wealthiest Americans Ever,” July 15 (online graphic at http://www.nytimes.com/ref/business/20070715_GILDED_GRAPHIC.html).
Newsweek. 2005. “How to Beat the Big Energy Chill,” November 21. Orrill, Robert. 2001. “Mathematics, Numeracy, and Democracy,” in Mathematics and
Democracy: The Case for Quantitative Literacy, Lynn Arthur Steen, ed. Princeton, NJ: National Council on Education and the Disciplines.
Shafer, Jack. 2005. “Weasel Words Rip My Flesh! Spotting a Bogus Trend Story on Page One of Today’s New York Times,” Slate, September 20.
Shulman, Lee S., 1997. “Professing the Liberal Arts,” in Education and Democracy: Re-Imagining Liberal Learning in America, New York: The College Board.
Steen, Lynn Arthur. 2004. Achieving Quantitative Literacy: An Urgent Challenge for Higher Education. Washington, DC: Mathematical Association of America.
Wiggins, Grant. 2003. "'Get Real!': Assessing for Quantitative Literacy" in Quantitative Literacy: Why It Matters for Schools and Colleges. Bernard Madison and Lynn Arthur Steen, eds. Princeton, NJ: National Council on Education and the Disciplines.