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20 - The Metric System Enters the American Classroom: 1790–1890

from IV - History of Mathematics and Pedagogy

Peggy Aldrich Kidwell
Affiliation:
National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
Amy Shell-Gellasch
Affiliation:
Beloit College
Dick Jardine
Affiliation:
Keene State College
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Summary

Introduction

The nineteenth century saw an enormous expansion in American mathematics education. Publicly funded elementary or common schools were established, first in the northern states and then throughout the country. By the second half of the century, public high schools also were becoming usual. The extension of engineering education, much of it modeled after the École Polytechnique in Paris, also encouraged mathematics instruction. At the same time, improvements in printing, cheaper paper, and the national markets created by railroads made it possible to supply students in the new schools with relatively inexpensive, uniform textbooks.

Several teachers and former teachers sought to supply the new schoolrooms with texts. Publishers such as A. S. Barnes & Company of Hartford and Appleton's of New York developed and marketed entire series of books [1, 18, 24]. Authors were mindful both of information included by their competitors and of requirements of school committees and newly established state boards of education. To remain competitive, many arithmetic textbooks came to include a discussion of the relatively recently formulated metric system of weights and measures. Discussions of the metric system in these books well illustrate the difficulty of making new mathematical structures part of the educational canon.

The Origins of the Metric System

In the wake of the revolution of 1789, French citizens called for uniform weights and measures throughout their country. With the approval of the National Assembly and subsequent national governments, a commission of the Paris Academy of Sciences and its successor, the Institute of France, developed totally new units for measuring distance, volume, weight, angles and even time.

Type
Chapter
Information
From Calculus to Computers
Using the Last 200 Years of Mathematics History in the Classroom
, pp. 229 - 236
Publisher: Mathematical Association of America
Print publication year: 2005

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