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Manitoba

With half of students failing or quitting, university calculus hitting Manitobans 'like a ton of bricks'

Manitoba students are so unprepared for universitycalculusthat half of them are either failing the first-year class or withdrawinglong before the final exam takes place.

Study from U of M professor shows top high school marks don't predict university success

A study from a University of Manitoba professor says many students who enrol in first-year university calculus struggle mightily, even if they were straight A students in their Grade 12 pre-calculus class. (Gary Locke/CBC)

Manitoba students are so unprepared for universitycalculusthat half of them are either failing the first-year class or withdrawinglong before the final exam takes place.

And how well they did in high school pre-calculus doesn't seem to indicate whether they'll succeed in university calculus.

Darja Barr, aUniversity of Manitoba math professor, analyzed 15 yearsof marksfor students who tookpre-calculusin a Grade 12 Manitoba classroom and introductory calculusat her university.

She found high school grades were a poor indicator of future success, which she saidis disturbing, sinceGrade 12 pre-calculus is designed to preparestudents for university calculus.

"It really does hit students like a ton of bricks when they get touniversity," Barr said.

In the last year of her study, she found high-achieving students in one Winnipeg school division who earned an A or A+ in pre-calculus were as likely to fail calculus in university as they were to earn another A or A+.

A professor for 13 years,Barr knowsit's common for A students in high school to drop one grade point when they enter post-secondary.

Students baffled

But too many students in her classes are barely treading water and she argues Manitoba's education system deserves some of the blame.

"I want to figure out why the disconnect is happening," said Barr, whoturned her research into a PhDthesis in education this year.

"I would have students come to me after a midterm and say, 'I don't understand what's happening.I got 90s in high school.'"

Barr's work alignswith other Canadian research showing deteriorating math scores countrywide. Students also struggle in other subjects, but the problem is most pronounced inmathematics and the sciences, she said.

In response to her own research, Barr asked the commission reviewing Manitoba's kindergarten-to-Grade-12 school system to improve the pre-calculus curriculum so students are prepared to continue their math education.

A building on the University of Manitoba Fort Garry campus.
The analysis found grades in high school to be a poor indicator of how a student will perform in university calculus. (Bryce Hoye/CBC)

She worriesthe status quo is discouragingpeople fromcareers in mathematics and the sciences.

Barr analyzed the gradesofmore than 12,000 students who took first-yearintroductory calculus at the U of M from 2001 to 2015, excluding students who voluntarily withdrew from the class and who did not go to high school in Manitoba.

She foundthe percentage of students with a final grade of C or better went to around 50 per cent of the class in 2015, from 65-70 per cent ofstudents five years earlier.

Her data shows students who scored well in calculus also did well in pre-calculus. However, there was no correlation between students who struggled in university math and their previous pre-calculus mark.

In fact, students with good grades in pre-calculus (4.5 GPA) were almost as likely to fail as students with poorer grades (2 GPA).

"I'm teaching calculus and seeing such high failure and withdrawal rates; it's very clear that the problem is a big problem," Barr said.

Since calculus builds upon a student's previous knowledge in math, it is obvious the province's education system isn't adequately preparing students for university, she said.

Darja Barr studied the disconnect between high school pre-calculus grades and university calculus grades to receive her PhD in education. (Submitted by Darja Barr)

Barr argues curriculum changes have made high school math worse; for example, the topic of conic sections has been removed from pre-calculus when it's considered a prerequisite for most first-year calculus courses.

More standardized tests are needed togaugewhere students are at, she also said.

School divisions and teachers realize there's a problem, Barr said.

Her findings were concerning enough to the Winnipeg School Division that their math teachers met with Barr and other university math professors, said program leadThomas Locke, who was previouslythe division's grades 7-12 math consultant.

School divisionrepresentatives sat in on a university calculus class, he said.

"The ideas the students need for success in calculus, we felt, were within the [high school]curriculum. They weren't necessarily in the best order, though," he said.

Lagging behind

Anna Stokke, co-founder of WISE Math, a numeracy advocacy group, said Barr's findings are in line with what she already knew. She's seen it first-hand as the head of the University of Winnipeg's math department.

Curriculum changes in the last few decades have delayed the teaching of essential subjects, such as adding fractions, she said.

"The thing withmath is, you need a lot of practice to get good at it," she said.

"If our students are seeing things two or three grades later than they should be, it's going to affect where they're at by Grade 12."

Like Barr,she's optimistic the province's education review will improve the teaching of math.

In the latestProgramme for International Student Assessment, the province's 15-year-olds scored dead last in math in comparison to their Canadian peers, Stokke said.

"Most people do recognize that there is a problem."

The Manitoba government said the province isn't considering changes to the math curriculum, butthe kindergarten to Grade 12 commission may make recommendations.

Barr's researchdoesn't compareother facultiesor post-secondary institutions, the province said in a statement.

"Although the study shows a decline in students' averages over a decade, it does not establish a long-term pattern that is different from what is already known that calculus has always been a challenging course with a high dropout rate."