-I spent my entire public school career in the Warwick schools system, from Kindergarten on. In the early 2000s when I went to middle school I began having some trouble with mathematics, so I had to be tutored so that I could catch up to the rest of the class. In my first year of 9th grade which I believe
was 2003 I was placed in a class called Algebra Connection.
The connections class used high tech, new calculators to come to conclusions about problems and went at a slower pace, perfect for a student like myself who was proficient at everything else except math. I passed the class and then took a tutoring session to raise the grade in the summer. When I entered tenth grade I was put in the second part of the class entitled Algebra Connections II. The teacher was there for two days, then went on a sabbatical. For the rest of the year we had a giant cast of characters ranging from volley ball coaches to long retired history teachers being brought half heartedly to teach us math. Truly, we learned absolutely nothing. On the last day of the year the head of the math department came in and asked us what grade we felt we deserved, of course everyone said A's. The next year I was placed in Geometry the non-connections course. They did not use the same methods we did in connections and I immediately fell behind. Quickly I tried to switch classes, though it was to no avail. I had to stay in the class.
A year later I was called into the office with my guidance counselor saying I never took my first year of math. (The tutor never sent in the grade). I had to go through a whole horrible ordeal of locating this woman who I hadn't spoken to in years and having her send my grade in. It was not an easy task. I have not yet learned those math skills I should have in high school because of the strange way they did business. The next time I take a math class I will have to work extra hard because it was ignored in high school.