The following article by professor Barry Simon, Chairman of the
Mathematics Department at Caltech, provides an answer to the stated question.
A Plea in Defense
of Euclidean Geometry
The following appeared in the Friday, February 6, 1998 issue
of the Los Angeles Times.
- Math education: Fewer classes require proofs--more whittling
away of exposure to logic and critical thinking.
By BARRY SIMON
While I grew up in snow country, I can't tell my kids that I
trudged miles through snow to get to school. But I can tell them
I learned proofs in high school geometry, which could become as
much a part of a vanished virtuous past.
One of the pleasures of being on the faculty at Caltech is interacting
with our bright undergraduates. For the past two years, I've asked
the incoming freshmen in my calculus/probability class whether
they had proofs in their high school geometry course. About 40%
have not, and more than half of the remainder had at best a cursory
few weeks. So less than one-third have had the kind of rigorous
theorem/proof course I had back in James Madison High School in
Brooklyn more than 30 years ago.
Why do I mourn this loss of what was a core part of education
for centuries? After all, we no longer require Greek and Latin
in high school and Euclid was just one of those Greeks, wasn't
he? While the geometric intuition that comes from the classical
high school geometry course is significant, what is really important
is the exposure to clear and rigorous arguments.
Modern mathematicians don't use the two-column proofs so beloved
by my high school geometry teachers, and real life rarely needs
the precise rigor of mathematicians, but those who have survived
those darned dual columns understand something about argumentation
and logic. They can more readily see through the faulty reasoning
so often presented in the media and by politicians.
It is not merely a question of good citizenship. In the global
economy, our young people will be in competition with young people
the world over. If I talk about American high school education
with scientific visitors from abroad, they are either aghast or
amused. Immigrants I know from the former Soviet Union tell of
fifth-grade Russian mathematics texts at a higher level than what
we teach juniors in high school. For a large number of jobs in
our technologically based world, a solid scientific and mathematical
training is essential and our foreign competitors are beating
us there.
The trend away from theorem/proof geometry seems to be based
on the following reasoning by the educational establishment: Some
high school students are just unable to get this theorem/proof
stuff. If we place them in a separate track, they'll wind up with
a low self-image. So to prevent some students from having a low
self-image, we won't ask anyone to understand it. This summary
is admittedly a caricature but it is the core of the reason that
Euclidean geometry is disappearing.
I'm not particularly worried about the lack of Euclidean geometry
among my Caltech freshmen. While my colleagues also have noted
a marked decrease in the quality of preparation of our students
over the past 15 years, we see that these students are just as
smart and motivated as Caltech students ever were. They are forced
by us to absorb notions of careful proof at a less leisurely pace
than they would experience in high school and the process can
be painful, for them and their teachers.
But I am concerned about the country as a whole. The dumbing
down of high school education in the United States, especially
in mathematics and science, is a crime that must be laid at the
doorstep of the educational establishment. We must demand that
the level of high school science and mathematics being taught
be improved, starting, of course, with Euclidean geometry.
Barry Simon is the chairman of the mathematics department
at Caltech. E-mail: bsimon@caltech.edu