PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Disconnected from math, students call for real-world relevance in RAND’s first-ever youth survey

In research funded by the Gates Foundation, new national data show widespread disengagement in math, highlighting a need for more relatable instruction and higher-quality curriculum

2025-06-17
(Press-News.org) According to the first-ever survey fielded to RAND’s new American Youth Panel (AYP), 49% of students in middle and high school grades reported losing interest in math about half or more of the time, and 75% of youths reported losing interest for at least some class time.

 

Loss of interest in math is consistent across genders and racial and ethnic groups.

 

In the fall of 2024, RAND asked youths in grades 5 through 12 about their math class experiences with plans to measure these math attitudes annually to track trends over time. This nationally representative report was fielded to a group of almost 2,000 youth ages 12-21 who regularly complete surveys via email and text message about their attitudes, behaviors, school experiences, and other issues affecting their lives.

 

Thirty percent of middle and high school students said that they have never considered themselves a “math person.” Those who did identify as math people developed this view during elementary school, suggesting that elementary school math teachers have a large role in cultivating positive math attitudes.

 

“Student feedback offers one of many likely reasons for the slow post-pandemic recovery: students are frequently bored with math,” said Heather L. Schwartz, vice president and director of RAND Education and Labor. “Although boredom is not unique to math, routine boredom is a problem. These findings emphasize the importance of boosting student engagement to improve academic outcomes.”

 

The RAND survey also found that students who lose interest in math often want fewer online activities and more real-world applications in their math classes.

 

“It may sound surprising in today’s high-tech environment, but online math activities might be less motivating than face-to-face instruction,” said Robert Bozick, senior research scientist at RAND, a nonprofit, nonpartisan research organization. “This emphasizes the need for high-quality math instruction, and we suggest a mix of engaging math activities combining face-to-face teacher-student interactions with a mix of offline and online activities and the use of more real-world applications in the classroom.”

 

This work was supported by the Gates Foundation

 

The AYP was launched in 2024 to augment RAND’s American Life Panel (ALP). Developed by RAND researchers in 2006, the ALP is a probability sample–based panel of approximately 8,000 regularly interviewed adults in the United States ages 18 and older. The AYP was developed to extend the age range of the ALP so that it can collect timely data on issues related to contemporary youths and their transition to adulthood.

 

Other authors of Losing Interest In Math: Findings from the American Youth Panel are Melissa Kay Diliberti and Sarah Ohls.

 

RAND Education and Labor conducts research on early childhood through postsecondary education programs, workforce development, and programs and policies affecting workers, entrepreneurship, financial literacy, and decisionmaking.

 

##

 

 

RAND is a nonprofit institution that helps improve policy and decisionmaking through research and analysis.
To sign up for RAND e-mail alerts: http://www.rand.org/publications/email.html

 

RAND is a registered trademark

 

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Three Hebrew University researchers win prestigious ERC Advanced Grants for pioneering work

2025-06-17
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem proudly congratulates three of its esteemed researchers – Prof. Dorit Aharonov, Prof. Israel Nelken, and Prof. Tamar Ziegler – on being awarded the highly competitive European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Grants. This prestigious recognition, part of the EU’s Horizon Europe programme, supports senior researchers in pursuing ambitious, curiosity-driven projects with the potential to make significant scientific breakthroughs. The ERC Advanced Grant competition is one of ...

Illuminated changes: Enhancing D-lactic acid output with UV irradiation

2025-06-17
Amid concerns over rising petroleum prices and resource depletion, organic compounds such as methanol are attracting attention as potential replacements. Though this bodes well in theory, the production of raw materials from methanol relies on costly chemical processes. An energy-saving, bio-based process is necessary for fully tapping into this resource. To make this a reality, Associate Professor Ryosuke Yamada’s team at Osaka Metropolitan University’s Graduate School of Engineering has developed a Komagataella phaffii (K. phaffii) yeast strain that can efficiently produce D-lactic acid, a raw material for ...

From food to textile – agricultural waste can become the clothes of the future

2025-06-17
Cellulose-based textile material can make the clothing sector more sustainable. Currently, cellulose-based textiles are mainly made from wood, but a study headed by researchers from Chalmers University of Technology points to the possibility of using agricultural waste from wheat and oat. The method is easier and requires fewer chemicals than manufacturing forest-based cellulose, and can enhance the value of waste products from agriculture. Making clothing from water-intensive cotton has a major impact on the climate. That’s why cellulose from other raw materials has come into focus in recent years as a more resource-smart method of textile production. Up to now, the ...

Claire Foldi advances eating disorder neuroscience research

2025-06-17
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 17 June 2025 - In a comprehensive Genomic Press Innovators & Ideas interview, Dr. Claire J. Foldi, an Associate Professor in the Department of Physiology at Monash University, shares her journey and groundbreaking work in the field of eating disorders. Dr. Foldi's research focuses on the neurobiology of eating disorders, particularly anorexia nervosa, and explores how novel therapeutics, including psychedelics, may offer new avenues for treatment. Early Inspirations and Career Trajectory Dr. Foldi's fascination with human behavior and the brain's processing of experiences began during her undergraduate studies. A pivotal moment ...

Yes, in my back yard: people who live near large-scale solar projects are happy to have more built nearby

2025-06-17
Would you like living next door to a solar farm? Traditionally, it’s been thought that although people like the idea of renewable energy plants, they don’t want them close by. Now research investigating how people who live near large-scale solar projects feel about them has found that 82% of people living within an hour’s walk of current projects would support, or are neutral towards, new projects in their area.   “Most neighbors of existing large-scale solar projects either support or feel neutral about additional ...

Easily attach nanoparticles like toy blocks for industrial use!

2025-06-17
Dr. Seunggun Yu and his team at KERI's Insulation Materials Research Center have developed a groundbreaking ‘Hybrid Supraparticle Synthesis Technology’ that can attach inorganic nanoparticles to the surface of polymer microparticles through simple mechanical collisions. The ‘Hybrid Supraparticle Synthesis Technology’ that combines functional inorganic nanoparticles with polymer microparticles is being widely applied across various industries, including battery electrode materials, catalyst systems, pharmaceuticals and biotechnology, semiconductor packaging, and insulating ...

LEGO improves maths and spatial ability in the classroom

2025-06-17
A simple classroom activity involving a classic childhood staple, LEGO, could improve children’s maths and spatial ability, leading researchers to demand for policymakers to shake up the school curricula and teachers’ professional development.  A new study, led by the University of Surrey, tested incorporating LEGO building into the daily teaching curriculum, leading to tangible improvements and boosting abilities for students aged six to seven.   The study, which involved 409 children from schools in Surrey and Portsmouth, demonstrated ...

Despite overall progress, low birthweight rates still high in certain Indian states

2025-06-16
Despite overall progress in bringing down low birthweight numbers across India over the past 30 years, rates remain stubbornly high in certain states, with Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Maharashtra, and West Bengal, accounting for almost half of all such births, finds research published in the open access journal BMJ Global Health. Low birthweight is important, because it often signals underlying maternal health issues and poor nutrition as well as the child’s future cognitive development and susceptibility to chronic conditions in later life, note ...

Train teachers on how to get parents involved in children’s learning, say researchers

2025-06-16
Over half of primary and secondary school teachers in England have not been trained in how to support parents’ involvement in children’s learning and education at home and at school.     That’s according to research published today in the peer-reviewed journal Educational Review, which is a first study of its kind based on a survey of more than 1,700 teachers reveals concerning gaps in skills.    Led by academics from the University of Warwick and UCL, the paper shows teachers’ essential pre-qualification training fails to ...

Evolution made us cheats, now free-riders run the world and we need to change, new book warns

2025-06-16
University of Cambridge media release   Evolution made us cheats, now free-riders run the world and we need to change, new book warns   UNDER STRICT EMBARGO UNTIL 00:01AM (UK TIME) ON TUESDAY 17TH JUNE 2025   To save democracy and solve the world's biggest challenges, we need to get better at spotting and exposing people who exploit human cooperation for personal gain, argues Cambridge social scientist Dr Jonathan Goodman.   In Invisible Rivals, published by Yale University Press today, Dr Goodman ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Tree rings reveal increasing rainfall seasonality in the Amazon

Scientists find unexpected deep roots in plants

Researchers unveil the immune cells responsible for systemic sclerosis’s deadliest complications

New blood test holds potential to reduce liver transplant failures

Science clears the way to treating the trickiest bladder cancers

Drug treatment alters performance in a neural microphysiological system of information processing

Wildfires could be harming our oceans and disrupting their carbon storage

Tarantulas bend rules to keep running after losing two legs

How chemical bonds are formed: physicists at TU Graz observe energy flow in real time

Fatty liver – but not liver damage – common in type 2 diabetes

Hydrogen sourcing could make or break Romania’s green steel ambitions, study finds

Disconnected from math, students call for real-world relevance in RAND’s first-ever youth survey

Three Hebrew University researchers win prestigious ERC Advanced Grants for pioneering work

Illuminated changes: Enhancing D-lactic acid output with UV irradiation

From food to textile – agricultural waste can become the clothes of the future

Claire Foldi advances eating disorder neuroscience research

Yes, in my back yard: people who live near large-scale solar projects are happy to have more built nearby

Easily attach nanoparticles like toy blocks for industrial use!

LEGO improves maths and spatial ability in the classroom

Despite overall progress, low birthweight rates still high in certain Indian states

Train teachers on how to get parents involved in children’s learning, say researchers

Evolution made us cheats, now free-riders run the world and we need to change, new book warns

Report outlines blueprint to grow Australia’s bioeconomy

Medicaid cuts in the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" could undermine the coverage, financial well-being, medical care, and health of low-income Americans, and lead to more than 16,500 medically-preventab

Groundbreaking TACIT algorithm offers new promise in diagnosing, treating cancer

Long-term study reveals Native seeding controls annual, but not perennial, invasive plants in sand grassland restoration

Printed energy storage charges into the future with MXene inks

Exposure to low levels of arsenic in public drinking water linked to lower birthweight, preterm birth, study finds

AMS Science Preview: Gun violence & weather; NOAA flights improve hurricane forecasts; atmospheric rivers and radio waves

New strategy for the treatment of severe childhood cancer

[Press-News.org] Disconnected from math, students call for real-world relevance in RAND’s first-ever youth survey
In research funded by the Gates Foundation, new national data show widespread disengagement in math, highlighting a need for more relatable instruction and higher-quality curriculum