Originally posted by AKcurly
Usually (not always), my freshman class was the first course of calculus. Most of my public school students had completed a calculus sequence in high school and should have tested out of freshman calculus. The private highschools in my area didn't offer the calculus sequence.
curly
It seems to me that you've provided the answer to your observation -- and it has less to do with the quality of education than with curriculum choices and resources.
Your public school students had been exposed to calculus to the degree that "they probaby should have tested out" of the course. Esseentially, your segment of the public school graduate pool was filled with science kids who had enough background to almost not need your class. The denominator was skewed, in other words.
In that environment, even bright kids with otherwise good math backgrounds would look less capable. And, the lack of calculus doesnt necessarily generalize to overall poor education, which you at least imply in several posts.
My "religious non-catholic" private school didnt get me to calculus level, but the year after I graduated (1980) they reorganized the math pathway so college prep kids could skip one lower tier and get the course. At the college level, my starting calculus skills were behind some kids, though I still got an A. However, my history, sociology, biology, and especailly english, writing, and literature backgrounds were superior -- even in the context of my university's Honors Colloquium programs. Is that really the private high school systemic failure you've generalized about?
My exposure to private schools in Ohio is a bit different than Oklahoma, and that may also explain some of your experience. While we clearly have some "church basement" type schools, where the main goal is to avoid exposure to the world regardless of academic compromise, we also have a fair number of aggressive college prep type schools whose students routinely top out the state wide tests. We also have a number of Jr Ivy League prep schools -- and comparing puvblic schools with that standard just wouldnt be fair, both from a resource standpoint and from the preselected student body.