Majority Opposed To Teaching Arabic Numerals

That would be funny if it was worded right. Numbers written in Arabic would be confusing.

If you wanted to point out that people don’t know the history of math that’s fine but I seriously doubt they were any wiser in non-Trump years.

But you did manage to blame Trump so… bless your heart?

It to laugh, but it exposes ignorance only, not prejudice per se. But I would like to see the result of a similar poll asking about Hindi numerals.

FWIW:

I would also vote against any modern American school curriculum including that Egyptian (Phoenician) Ox-House pseudo-graphical system# of writing.

Our kids have better things* to do!

–G!
#Then again, I can read Japanese Kana – and even some Kanji :smiley:
*Like stringing colored beads…

My point was to refute JAQ’s assertion that knowing that we use Arabic numbers is the same level of knowledge as knowing that dihydrogen monoxide is water. It’s not.
In other news, Arabic numerals vs Roman numerals was a Jeopardy answer today! :slight_smile:

Until I read this it didn’t really occur to me the irony of an Arabic country using what appear to be non-Arabic numbers.
Iranian paper money:

Third image down.

I knew our number system is credited to the ancient arab civilization.

I haven’t heard the term Arabic numerals before.

9 words in math from arab culture

Uh… Iran is not an Arabic country. It’s Persian. My Persian friend would kick your butt for that.

(He’s not Muslim either; he’s Zoroastrian…)

When you have a poorly designed question, you’re going to get really bad data.

You could have a bunch of people who actual know Eastern Arabic numerals like this: ١.٢.٣.٤.٥.٦.٧.٨.٩ Zero is represented by a dot. So if that’s the case then what does your data show?

I wonder what the data would have shown if they asked about the Hindu-Arabic numerals, or Western Arabic numbers?

Really the data doesn’t show anything, without a bunch of follow up questions asking the same thing in different ways it’s a meaningless result.

How can someone be unaware that the term for the numerals used in English today is Arabic numerals? I seriously doubt that bit of info was “some obscure tidbit in a lesson long ago”. I heard it plenty of times from grade school all the way until I graduated university and even after.

Wait, what is dihydrogen monoxide?

Oh, duh.

~Max

I’m sure there are plenty of Americans that are unaware of such. I knew they were Arabic numerals but I can’t recall specifically when I learned that in school, it was mentioned once or twice maybe. I’m a college graduate but I’m sure a lot of college graduates even may not recall that if they were say on a game show or something.

I mean what’s the alternative that most people know they are Arabic numerals but want to switch to some other number system because it’s Arabic in origin, that seems pretty far fetched in my opinion.

The American school system is not all that great anyway. Have you ever seen some of those polls or tonight show type interviews where they ask Americans geography or basic science questions and they are completely unbelievably ignorant?

As an American I’ll admit too that I’m not that well-versed in geography.

Oddly, I haven’t. I know the term. I can’t think of a single time I have heard it in conversation. There’s little reason to refer to it, since it’s the normal number system we use. It makes sense if you’re using it to contrast to another number system but what other number system would we have to contrast it against typically? I mean, Roman numerals, I guess, but then most people just call them “numbers” vs “Roman numerals” not “Arabic numerals” vs “Roman numerals.”

I’m not trying to be anti-intellectual here. I just don’t see why the average person would know or remember this. This is not a point of fact, at least in my experience, that is drilled into our brains from grammar school onward.

Graduated from university, eh? You elitist, you. :slight_smile:

Americans don’t know a lot of things more important and less obscure than the term Arabic numbers.
I think you are spoiled from hanging around here. Note that people have already nitpicked their true origin.
In a country with such a high percentage of people who are creationists, Arabic numbers are the least of our problems.

I learned Arabic vs. Roman numerals in primary school (right around when we learned to read clocks), and then again in secondary school during world history.

~Max

You were explicitly taught at that age that they were Arabic numerals? That would be like first or second grade, right? We just called them “numbers.” I mean, I guess I’m somewhat surprised that people were taught the name of the number system that early on. Perhaps that is the norm, but I really don’t think I learned it in primary school; secondary school it’s possible that it was mentioned in world history class or something of that nature. But, once again, something mentioned a couple of times and forgotten about.