Virginia educrats drop the hammer on advanced math education

I have personal experience of this since my high school in the UK (ages 11 - 16) was opposed to tracking. Ironically, it did still track for maths after age 14, probably because it’s one of the subjects with the widest range of abilities and it would have been impossible to teach all levels in one group.

Mostly the teachers taught to a level somewhat below the average. The poorest students were unable to keep up and would get what small amount of individual attention the teacher was able to spare them. In the last few years we were preparing for exams, and the teachers were effectively forced to teach 3 different courses in one class, which meant each student got only 1/3 of the teaching and attention they would have had if we’d been tracked. Any teacher is going to have a harder job teaching a really wide range of abilities, and have less time left to give attention to any one student.

Unlike Kimstu’s experience, all my maths teachers after high school complained that we had not been taught the necessary prerequisites (though this is not due to lack of advanced courses, but the dumbing down of exams so that schools can achieve better ratings) and we spent our time struggling to catch up to where we should be.

I bet the great majority of the posters in this thread did do some sort of advanced education at school and don’t have the experience to say this proposal is better. Am I right?