About a week ago I ordered 7 or 8 books from amazon (I do this 2 to 4 times a year, depending on how much I can afford to spend), and yesterday Wooton’s book arrived (bibliographic details below). This is the book that, in my answer to Where can I find primary sources from the New Math movement in the 60s?, I said I don’t believe I’ve ever looked at before. At some later time I might archive some information about Wooton’s book in that earlier answer. However, as I was reading through his book the past couple of days, I came across some comments that I thought would fit well in this thread.
William Wooton (1919-1988), SMSG. The Making of a Curriculum, Yale University Press, 1965, x + 182 pages.
REVIEWED BY:
Harry Merrill Gehman (1898−1981), Science (NS) 150 #3693 (8 October 1965), p. 202.
Bryan Thwaites (1923−___), Mathematical Gazette 50 #374 (December 1966), pp. 403−404.
Robert Marion Todd (1928−2015), Arithmetic Teacher 14 #3 (March 1967), p. 232.
5-paragraph excerpt from pp. 26−29:
A detailed description, here, of the outline or of the philosophy underlying the 9th grade text would involve mathematical considerations beyond the scope of this work. To show the nature of the dialogue involved, however, it seems worthwhile to look at one of the more fundamental problems the group faced. Most persons who, at one time or another, have been exposed to a course in elementary algebra have little difficulty recalling that central to the subject is the use of letters of the alphabet as symbols. In particular, the letter $x$ comes easily to mind. It is around the use of such symbols that some of the “modern” controversy centers.” Traditionally, such symbols have been referred to as “unknowns,” “literal numbers,” “general numbers,” and “variables,” in some cases depending on context, in others depending on the whim of the user. The student has been told that these symbols are unknown numbers and that, in some cases, he can add these numbers $(x+x = 2x)$ while, in other cases, he cannot (e.g., $x+y).$ He has been instructed in ways of “finding the unknown,” as, for example: if $x+2 = 5,$ then $x=3.$ But, on the other hand, he has been told that he is not to try to “find $x$” when writing such things as $x(x+2) = x^2 + 2x.$ This is due to the fact that the usual manipulations in which he becomes involved when working with such symbol groups produce $\text{O} = \text{O},$ which, though true, does not seem to tell him anything he wants to know about $x.$ Worse, should he inadvertently apply his ingenuity to $x = x+1,$ he arrives at the mystifying $\text{O} = 1,$ which not only does not tell him anything about $x,$ but causes him to call into question the sensibilities of anyone who finds interest in a discipline that deals with such absurdities.
It is one of the concerns of those seeking to revise the mathematics curriculum to make the meaning of such symbols clear to students, and to place their use on a sound logical foundation. Granting this, however, the best way to establish such a foundation is a matter of much controversy (hence, one reason for the lengthy discussions of the 9th grade subgroup). Present-day logicians, in their inquiries into the foundations of mathematics, have had occasion to use the notion of what they call a “placeholder,” and it was this viewpoint that UICSM had adopted. Briefly: a number is an abstraction. Nobody has ever heard, felt, or seen a number, but the body proper of mathematics stems from the fact that the human mind can conceive of such abstractions. Furthermore, in discussing numbers, symbols are used which are called, in some cases, numerals, and in others, pronumerals, placeholders, or variables. The logicians, having found it necessary to work at varying levels of abstraction, have come to view a symbol such as “$2$” not as a number, nor even as the name of a number, but rather as a representation of the name of a number. Another representation of the same name of the same number is “two.” A number has infinitely many names; for example, another name for the number whose name can be represented by “$2$” is the name represented by the symbolism “$1+1.$” A symbol such as “$x,$” then, can be viewed as holding a place in an expression such as “$x+5$” for a representation of a name of a number, hence the name “placeholder.”
A step from the logicians are those who believe that the distinction between a name and its representation is unnecessary in all but the deepest discussions of foundations, and that it is sufficient to distinguish between the number itself and its name. Thus, the symbol “$2$” is the name of a number, just as the word “Tom” is the name of a person. At this level of abstraction, however, there are various ways of viewing symbols such as “$x.$” In one view, when one is considering the expression “$x+5,$” the symbol “$x$” is conceived of as holding a place for the name of a number and is thus, conceptually, a “placeholder.” In another view, the symbol “$x$” is used in the expression “$x+5$” as the name of a number and is called a “variable.” Inherent in both viewpoints, of course, is the agreement that there is some specified set of numbers with which the symbol “$x$” is associated.
Although there is almost universal agreement on the importance of distinguishing between a number and its name, the best way, mathematically, and pedagogically, to view the use of a symbol such as “$x$” is the center of much controversy. In view of the eminence of many proponents of each point of view, it would appear that, for the present, the way in which such symbols should be handled depends on the spirit in which the subject matter of algebra as a whole is handled, and this is chiefly a matter of who is doing the handling. It should be apparent, however, that the question is not a trivial one, since, in a sense, the way in which it is resolved determines to a greater or lesser extent the spirit in which the subject of algebra is taught. The question is essentially one of the “level of abstraction” and, barring gross misrepresentations, the argument reduces as much to a pedagogical matter as it does to a mathematical one. The problem of finding the level of abstraction appropriate to the cognitive readiness of the student is a very real one, and the definitive answer, if such exists, has not yet been found.
To return to the matter at hand, the question of how to treat symbols was one (though not the only one) of the causes for the lengthy pre-discussions held by the 9th grade group before beginning detailed outlines of chapters, and their final decision was not free from critical attack by proponents of alternative viewpoints, as was to be expected.