How often do you see something like this? The 1L from a compass-point state college beats the Ivy League alumna. The C-average graduate, not the law review's editor in chief, eventually donates $1 million. The tier-four law school graduate becomes the faculty star, while the Supreme Court clerk hired the same year is grudgingly voted tenure and becomes an unproductive curmudgeon dedicated to guarding his sinecure. One underlying factor may be driving the entire phenomenon. |
The fable at work here, of course, is that of the tortoise and the hare. Folk wisdom and anecdote find further support in the latest report of the National Mathematics Advisory Panel.
Much of the report covers ground that is as depressing as it is familiar. The report cited a 2007 assessment concluding that 15-year-olds in America ranked 25th among their peers in 30 developed nations in math literacy and problem solving. The National Assessment of Educational Progress found that almost half the eighth graders tested could not solve a word problem requiring the division of fractions. According to the advisory panel, the failure to master fractions posed the greatest obstacle separating American students from mastery of algebra.
But I digress. The Advisory Panel made one additional finding of special interest to our educational system as a whole. Its report cited findings that students who draw upon their native intelligence learn less math than those who believe that success depends on hard work. The panel's chairman, Larry Faulkner, condemned the current “talent-driven approach to math, that either you can do it or you can’t, like playing the violin.”
As a rule, of course, we do no such thing. This profession's nonelite tortoises, whatever they might lack in resources or opportunities, will simply have to keep outworking and outracing their hare-legged counterparts. I'll be betting on members of family Testudinidae.