Revolutionary ‘Singapore Math’ at Osceola

INDIAN RIVER COUNTY — In the 1980s, the country of Singapore introduced a new kind of math teaching that relies on visualization and relates numbers to real life. Within a decade, students in that dynamic Asian city-state went from mediocre to having the best math scores in the world.

Now, island education leader Mary Lou Hammond and Osceola Magnet Elementary School Principal Scott Simpson are working to bring the benefits of “Singapore Math” to Indian River County’s public schools – where lagging math scores cry out for help.

When school reopens in the fall, Osceola Magnet will be the first public school in Florida to fully implement the revolutionary program.

Hammond’s passion for education goes back a long way. When her children were young, she was a major force behind the 1965 founding of Saint Edward’s School; about 10 years ago, she made the case for the island school to institute Singapore Math.

Hammond has now turned her sights on the public school system, which clearly has room for improvement. According to 2014-15 test results, just 54 percent of county public school students are doing satisfactory in math. A U.S. News and World Report ranking based on the 2013-14 school year showed math proficiency rankings of 41 percent at Sebastian River High School, 47 percent at Vero Beach High School and 73 percent at the Charter High School.

Hammond has been collaborating with Simpson since last summer, helping get the school ready for a new way of learning mathematics. Simpson says he has the full support of School Superintendent Mark Rendell and other top district administrators.

“In the 1980s, the country of Singapore decided to invest in their education in a different way, specifically deciding that mathematics was going to be a way to reeducate and help their citizens succeed economically,” Simpson explains. “They decided to take a different approach to mathematics and within a decade they went from not being on the radar for ratings to leading the world. And as soon as Singapore came out on top, that’s when the world took notice.”

Hammond says she has been “in constant contact” with Madge Goldman, president of the Rosenbaum Foundation, who was instrumental in bringing Singapore Math to this country, where it has spread to more than 2,500 schools, most of them private schools like St. Ed’s.

“She has agreed to work with Scott in this program,” says Hammond. “We have the best person in the country working with Scott. We will get advice from all the professors that are using or know about the math. And St. Edward’s was helpful; the teachers let him visit their math classes.”

“The history of American mathematics is mostly based upon drill and memorization,” says Simpson, who has taught math at the elementary, middle school and college level before becoming principal at Osceola.

A foundation of Singapore Math is that there are three primary steps – concrete, pictorial and abstract. The idea being, every mathematics problem that you do should relate to real life; something concrete.

The next step is pictorial or visualization. The students should be able to visualize or see what they’re doing and how the numbers are composed or decomposed. It’s a structure for students to see even the most complex of problems; to draw a picture of what it looks like. And the last step is the abstract; simple abstract numbers. The goal is that every student should be able to draw a model of what that problem could be about and then take that picture and turn it into a concrete real-life example.

“You still want to get the right answer. That’s very important. But at the end of the day, what separates Singapore Math is that a right answer without knowing what it means is useless. You need to be able to get the right answer and also understand what it means conceptually.”

All Osceola teachers received their initial Singapore Math training in May from Sara Schafer of the Bolles School, a high-achieving private school in Jacksonville. She will return in August to focus on individual grade levels and will then come again in the fall.

Comments are closed.