Sunday, May 17, 2009

Need to Brush Up on Math Skills? Gamble!

What, you say? How dare I try to make a claim that gambling has a societal benefit? Don't take it out on me! Take it out on Teri Hatcher, one of the lead actresses on the television series Desperate Housewives. A news item reported on ContactMusic.com that Teri takes her daughter to racetracks (Teri's apparently a horse racing fan) and uses gambling problems to hone the youngster's math skills. As Teri is quoted, "I do use the opportunity to make her understand math and what you're betting and what you get back... so we work on math. It's fun."

There 'ya go. See, responsible gambling can be used to teach kids math! According to the American Academy of Family Physicians, alcoholism affects between 8%-14% of the population. But the Connecticut Department of Mental Health and Addiction services reports that only 2.7% of Americans suffer from problem gambling. Why is this relevant? Because you see much more opposition to gambling than you do to drinking. Seems to me that if these people wanted a more lucrative target, they would oppose drinking. Oh, wait...did that a few years back. How did that work out? Right, no one's drinking anymore. Hmm, tried something similar for internet gambling with UIGEA a couple of years back. How did that work out? Right. No one's gambling online anymore.

So what's going on here? What's going on is that an adult properly instructing her child using a form of entertainment for adults, handled responsibly, isn't such a bad thing. If anything, gambling would be a means to teach math. Addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, probability - gaming math covers all these things.

If you think this is a rare exception, think again. Now not gambling, fantasy sports is also mathematically-focused. There is actually a published mathematics curriculum used in schools right now that leverages fantasy sports to teach mathematics. Effective? Here's a couple of data points:

  • 75% of the teachers agreed that students understand mathematical concepts more now than they did before they used Fantasy Sports and Mathematics
  • The percentage of 8th grade students who tested proficient at Woodbine School in New Jersey increased from 10% to 54% in one year after using fantasy sports
(FantasySportsMath.com)

There you have it. Find interesting and entertaining ways to teach kids - and they learn. What a concept. Isn't this better for the kids than handing out condoms and phone numbers to abortion clinics?


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