Study: People who study Algebra 2 make more $$$ and are less likely to be unemployed

godkiller

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Question the importance of math (even basic math) and fail in life, brehs *ahem, @KidStranglehold*:

Your High School Math Performance May Predict Your Future Salary



Think twice before skipping your geometry homework. The further you get in high-school math, the better you're likely to fare in the labor market.

Students who complete higher levels of math in high school experience lower rates of unemployment and receive higher salaries, on average, than their less-accomplished peers, according to new research from the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland.

Using data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, former Cleveland Fed researcher Jonathan James found that full-time workers who graduated high school but did not attend college earned about $1.30 more per hour if they completed geometry or algebra II ("high math") than if they stopped at pre-algebra or algebra I ("low math"). High math achievers were also less likely to be unemployed, as you can see in the chart below:

screen%20shot%202013-11-04%20at%205.47.31%20pm.png
Cleveland Fed



Similarly, full-time workers ages 20 to 30 who dropped out of high school have higher median wages by $1.66 per hour if they completed geometry or algebra II, instead of just pre-algebra or algebra I, and are also less likely to be unemployed. Here's that chart:

screen%20shot%202013-11-04%20at%205.45.50%20pm.png
Cleveland Fed



Higher levels of math achievement, in other words, benefit you in the labor market regardless of whether you graduate high school. James notes that the earnings gap between high school grads with high and low math is about 10% — the same return, he says, as comes from one year of college.

"Put another way, students who find college prohibitively costly can potentially increase their earnings by making smarter choices while in high school, an institution with zero monetary costs," James writes.

While the paper doesn't speculate about why higher achievement in math leads to increased earning potential, it seems reasonable to assume that better math skills could translate to a higher-paying job. After all, much of what's learned in courses like geometry and algebra II is applicable on an everyday, real-world basis. Additionally, students who complete high-level math courses may have parents who place more emphasis on education, or may value it more themselves.

Over the past three decades, course requirements have nearly doubled the percentage of high school students that complete high-level math courses — from 39% in 1982 to 75% in 2009. Still, James wonders if this change is good enough.

"If the payoffs to math are so large," he asks, "why stop at the minimum standards?"
 

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This is obvious. They have college prep and career prep. Career prep is mainly fukk shyt. College prep is the decent shyt. It's obvious you are probably going to college on one compared to the other.
 

Richard Wright

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This is stupid as fukk. Ain't shyt "higher" about algebra 2, I took that shyt in tenth grade. Higher math is calc bc.
 

godkiller

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This is obvious. They have college prep and career prep. Career prep is mainly fukk shyt. College prep is the decent shyt. It's obvious you are probably going to college on one compared to the other.

The study looks at high school dropouts who passed Algebra 2 and those who only passed Algebra 1 respectively, and concludes that even high school dropouts who attempted and passed Algebra 2 make more money than high school dropouts whom only passed Algebra 1. So even at a basic level, math matters in life.

This is stupid as fukk. Ain't shyt "higher" about algebra 2, I took that shyt in tenth grade. Higher math is calc bc.

What's stupid about about the study? It substantiates the fact that knowing math matters, even basic math, and that people whom don't have a Algebra 2 fail in life. People who have anything higher are more likely to succeed. This study is a good counterargument to all the posters in @KidStranglehold who were dissing the importance of Algebra (let alone calc and higher math).
 

Richard Wright

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I
The study looks at high school dropouts who passed Algebra 2 and those who only passed Algebra 1 respectively, and concludes that even high school dropouts who attempted and passed Algebra 2 make more money than high school dropouts whom only passed Algebra 1. So even at a basic level, math matters in life.



What's stupid about about the study? It substantiates the fact that knowing math matters, even basic math, and that people whom don't have a Algebra 2 fail in life. People who have anything higher are more likely to succeed. This study is a good counterargument to all the posters in @KidStranglehold who were dissing the importance of Algebra (let alone calc and higher math).

Tbh you're right, I missed the other thread/context.

Being good at math got me out of the hood and into the middle class.

But it's all about calc in high school now
 

HipHopStan

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Back when I was in school (00-04), Algebra 2 was optional (if you took the class and passed, you got college credit), but I heard that it's apart of the curriculum nowadays. I didn't take it, because math was never my venue. I was more of a history guy, myself.
 
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