Close Menu
Faith On MotionFaith On Motion
    What's Hot

    Going Against Public Opinion

    February 26, 2026

    Listening to the Father’s Heart

    February 26, 2026

    Spiritual Warfare

    February 26, 2026
    Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn TikTok RSS
    Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn TikTok RSS
    Faith On MotionFaith On Motion
    SUBSCRIBE
    • Leadership & Operations
      • Leadership & Ministry
        • Servant Leadership
        • Pastoral Care
        • Preaching Excellence
        • Team Development
        • Discipleship Strategies
        • Ministry Finance
      • Spiritual Growth
        • Prayer & Intercession
        • Bible Study Methods
        • Personal Holiness
        • Spiritual Disciplines
        • Christian Living
        • Theological Foundations
      • Family & Relationships
        • Marriage & Partnership
        • Parenting
        • Singles Ministry
        • Intergenerational Church
        • Conflict Resolution
        • Christian Counseling
    • Ministry & Media
      • Music & Worship
        • Worship Techniques
        • Artist Spotlights
        • Worship Devotionals
        • Gospel Music Trends
        • Worship Technology
        • Songwriting & Arranging
      • Film & Drama
        • Faith Films
        • Drama Ministry
        • Film Production
        • Documentary Storytelling
        • Youth Drama
        • Theatre & Stage
      • Media & Communications
        • Digital Strategy
        • Livestreaming & Production
        • Church Websites
        • Social Media Ministry
        • Visual Storytelling
        • Communications Teams
    • Kingdom & Enterprise
      • Business & Kingdom Entrepreneurship
        • Ethical Finance
        • Mission-Driven Startups
        • Marketplace Ministry
        • Social Enterprise
        • Leadership in Business
        • Business Ethics
      • Social Impact
        • Community Development
        • Humanitarian Response
        • Advocacy & Justice
        • Volunteer Mobilization
        • Impact Measurement
        • Environmental Stewardship
    • Global Vision
      • Youth & Innovation
        • Youth Ministry Models
        • Creative Technology
        • Student Leadership
        • Digital Evangelism
        • Mentorship Programs
        • Next Gen Trends
      • Global Missions
        • Cross-Cultural Ministry
        • Mission Strategy
        • Tentmaking & Vocation
        • Missions Funding
        • Church Planting
        • Global Partnerships
    Faith On MotionFaith On Motion
    Home » The Many Factors of America’s Math Problem
    Leadership & Ministry

    The Many Factors of America’s Math Problem

    FaithOnMotionBy FaithOnMotionFebruary 24, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram Copy Link
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

    I can tell you the story of how math instruction is failing many students in my town of Midland, Texas. But the problem is far bigger than Midland. It’s the nation’s story—and understanding what steps we can take to fix our math problem starts with understanding what is broken. 

    related

    ‘I’m Not Being Disrespectful, Mama. I Just Don’t Understand.’

    Carrie McKean in Midland, Texas

    On that question, I found a lot of agreement among teachers, parents, students—and Matt Friez, a local doctor and member of Midland Independent School District’s Board of Trustees. (Midland ISD doesn’t allow teachers to speak on record, and my request for comment from the district went unanswered before publication.) My sources pointed to generational, technological, administrative, personnel, political, and pedagogical factors that together are robbing a whole cohort of children of the math skills they need.

    Some problems are unique to this generation. Neuroscientists see alarming trends that indicate Gen Z is “less cognitively capable” than previous generations, with dips in executive functioning abilities and lower working memory. These difficulties correlate with growing up in a highly digital age where information like phone numbers, addresses, and multiplication tables is always at our fingertips and therefore doesn’t need to be mentally stored, processed, and recalled. 

    The last decade of educational practices, instead of pushing against this pattern, have only exacerbated it as school-issued screenshave become the norm. And building mental skills is like building muscles: Without practice, we lose capacity.

    Classroom dynamics are also newly challenging compared to decades past. Multiple teachers talked with me about the difficulty of getting through a lesson when just one or two students are disruptive. Even low-level behavior problems that don’t merit classroom expulsion can derail a teacher’s ability to deliver quality instruction, and until recently, many districts moved away from firm discipline even as student misbehavior increased post-pandemic. (Midland ISD is working to strengthen student discipline.) 

    The difficulties inherent to bilingual classrooms are real too. As teachers, students, and Friez all explained to me, kids who don’t speak English fluently—some of whom have been educated in this district since early childhood—struggle to understand math instruction in an English-only classroom. Low literacy, including among native English speakers, creates a similar hurdle. If students can’t read and understand a word problem, how can they solve it?

    Hiring is another pinch point for campus administrators and district leaders. Teacher shortages are a crisis nationwide, and it’s not like you can hold off on teaching algebra until a proficient teacher can be found. Instead, seasoned educators frantically try to fill gaps. One veteran teacher told me she regularly instructs her fellow math teachers in how to get through their daily lessons. Even well-meaning and hardworking teachers, she said, often don’t understand the material themselves, which raises serious questions about the quality of collegiate teacher education programs.

    To all this, state benchmark testing pressures educators to “teach for the test,” lest their school lose needed resources. This often looks like introducing new concepts more rapidly than students can handle, rushing on to a new topic before children master the first.

    related

    It’s Not Just What We Teach, but How

    Matt Reynolds

    Supreme Court Rejects Nation’s First Religious Charter School

    Emily Belz

    Here in Midland, in an effort to increase classroom accountability and hold students to grade-level standards, our school district has begun requiring daily data reporting from all teachers. Both the teachers and Friez talked about using daily “exit tickets”—short quizzes to check for understanding—with teachers being required to post results at the classroom door for administrators to see. The goal is good, but in practice, it’s just another item on teachers’ already overlong checklists. 

    Then there’s the culture wars: Education has become a battlefield in these larger political conflicts. Here in Midland, where it’s not unusual to see election results of 90 to 10, you might expect culture warring to be rare. Yet even here we’re caught up in these fights, guilty of giving more attention and outrage to tribal disputes than the difficult practical work of ensuring our children can do math. Teaching methods and class content have been politicized, judged less for their usefulness than their fit with ideological agendas—to the point that concerns about equity have led some districts to cancel advanced math classes.

    And undergirding all these factors is an often-unrecognized philosophical shift in math instruction driven by novel guidance from influential experts and authorities. With the advent of the controversial Common Core instructional standards, which was broadly introduced around the same time national math performance peaked, instructional emphasis moved from “drill and kill” fluency practice to building conceptual understanding. 

    If that sounds fuzzy, well, for many students, it is. Classroom time is increasingly given over to complex discussions of math concepts, while fundamental math fluency is neglected. What good is it to understand triangle congruence defined by rotations, reflections, and translations when you can’t multiple 12 times 12 in your head? 

    related

    Under Trump, Conservative Christians Want to Reshape Public Education or Flee the System

    Kelsey Kramer McGinnis

    There’s No One Equation for Educating Christian Kids

    Gretchen Ronnevik

    Grade inflation can ensure students make it to graduation day. But with all these forces shaping their daily instruction and classroom experience, it can’t make them competent and confident in math.

    This is a difficult conversation for all of us. But it’s also undeniably necessary. “Given the challenges of the political nature of public education, and the fact that we have so many students far behind, it is essential that we operate in the sphere of truth and grace,” Friez told me. And these, he added, are “two bedrocks of Christianity. We must recognize and acknowledge the truth—but just as God gives us all grace when we didn’t earn it or deserve it, we need to extend that same grace to teachers, students, administrators, parents, extended families, board trustees, and everyone when we discuss truths that might not always be pleasant.”

    This is part two of a three-part series on math education in America. Read part one here. Return for part three tomorrow.
    The post The Many Factors of America’s Math Problem appeared first on Christianity Today.

    Follow on Google News Follow on Flipboard
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleThey May Forget Your Sermons, but They’ll Remember This
    Next Article Four Years into the War, Life Goes on for Ukrainians
    FaithOnMotion

    Related Posts

    Trump’s SOTU Heralded a Revival. The Data Is Mixed.

    February 25, 2026

    At SOTU, Trump Overstates and Inflates Presidential Power

    February 25, 2026

    What If Aliens Are Real? A Thought Experiment

    February 25, 2026

    Mass Kidnappings Leave Nigerian Churches Reeling

    February 25, 2026

    First, Honesty. Then, Multiplication Tables.

    February 25, 2026

    Faith Should be Public but Not Performative

    February 25, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Economy News

    Going Against Public Opinion

    By FaithOnMotionFebruary 26, 2026

    “On the eighth day they came to circumcise the child, and they were going to name him after his father Zechariah, but his mother spoke up and said, ‘No! He is to be called John.’ They said to her, ‘there is no one among your relatives who has that name.’” (Luke 1:59-61). Have you ever

    Listening to the Father’s Heart

    February 26, 2026

    Spiritual Warfare

    February 26, 2026
    Top Trending

    Going Against Public Opinion

    By FaithOnMotionFebruary 26, 2026

    “On the eighth day they came to circumcise the child, and they were going to name him after his father Zechariah, but his mother spoke up and said, ‘No! He is to be called John.’ They said to her, ‘there is no one among your relatives who has that name.’” (Luke 1:59-61). Have you ever

    Listening to the Father’s Heart

    By FaithOnMotionFebruary 26, 2026

    You have been pondering something, my son, that you’re having trouble reconciling. You are wondering how I could honor David by making his son Solomon king and part of the generational line to the Messiah when he was a byproduct of a sinful relationship, even involving murder as a cover up for David’s sin with

    Spiritual Warfare

    By FaithOnMotionFebruary 26, 2026

    “For our struggle is not against flesh and blood….” – Ephesians 6:12 Have you ever heard someone say, “I will never do business with another Christian”? I hear this comment quite often in my dealings with Christian workplace believers. This comment represents the battle that rages against us by the enemy of our soul to

    Subscribe to News

    Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

    Advertisement
    Demo
    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest Vimeo WhatsApp TikTok Instagram

    News

    • World
    • US Politics
    • EU Politics
    • Business
    • Opinions
    • Connections
    • Science

    Company

    • Information
    • Advertising
    • Classified Ads
    • Contact Info
    • Do Not Sell Data
    • GDPR Policy
    • Media Kits

    Services

    • Subscriptions
    • Customer Support
    • Bulk Packages
    • Newsletters
    • Sponsored News
    • Work With Us

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    © 2026 Faith On Motion. Designed by Dolapo Ariyo.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Accessibility

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.