aunt betty wrote:jehler wrote:Honestly in the last 25 years the only time I have seen the need to know the order of operations in a math problem was in random jumbled up problems posted on the Internet to make people look stupid and help needs to feel smart
In the real world math is not presented in chaos
Start doing some integrations and derrivations and see how quick you start using order of operations stuff.
Of course it's not every-day math like how many gallons of diesel does Jehler need to get to the jobsite but is still important to us all.
What really concerns me is that nobody seems to give a chit about math because "someone else can figure it out".
Eventually you'll be the 'someone'. Then we're all eff, eff, effed.
Try laying out a stair-stringer without math. Just guess.![]()
Hard to believe a carpenter is also a math-hater.
You can't build stuff square and true (as easily) without geometry and math.
Design a simple truss sometime.
Write down the formula we use for calculating stairs. It's COMPLICATED and involves redistributing the remainder of a division problem back into the solution. I'll bet order of operations matters.
Who the hell needs a formula for stairs? I need a tape measure and a pencil. All the math I use carpentering I learned by grade 7.
For fuck's sake, nobody is saying "I don't have to use math". What is being said is, if you love math, fine. But let's not try and pretend that it has an application in every day life. By the same rationale being bandied about here, students should be taught the difference between alkanes and alkenes because they run a fricking gas grill. Silliness. I care as much about derivatives as you do about ancient Latin. And while we're on that, maybe everyone should have to learn Latin because it's the basis of so much of our language. Or we could just teach them how to properly use English instead.