Math Book Helps Girls Embrace Their Inner Mathematician

Wired: Math Book Helps Girls Embrace Their Inner Mathematician

The actress who played Winnie Cooper on The Wonder Years, Danica McKellar, is a self-proclaimed math advocate for girls who might otherwise shy away from a subject that Barbie once famously described as "hard."

McKellar's math book for junior high girls, called Math Doesn't Suck: How to Survive Middle-School Math and not Break a Nail, will be at bookstores Thursday. It has the look and feel of a teen magazine, but puts heavy emphasis on fractions and pre-algebra.

Graduating summa cum laude from UCLA with a degree in mathematics, McKellar is also co-author of a published proof. She has testified before Congress on math education and served as a substitute teacher.

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The book includes horoscopes, testimonials, cute doodles and quotes from girls. Word problems are brought to life with descriptions of lipstick, beads, cookies and similarly girly examples that might make the feminist in some women cringe. In the interview below, McKellar explains why being a math whiz and a girly girl are not mutually exclusive.


Comments

2 responses to “Math Book Helps Girls Embrace Their Inner Mathematician”

  1. Married to a mathematician, this sounds great. We (my wife and I) have met so many stereotypes when it comes to this. The most recent one was a graduate degreed Christian male who could not believe my wife was emotionally intelligent and wired for calculus simultaneously.

  2. I’m married to an industrial engineer. My niece just graduated from SMU in business and is a calculus whiz. I have a female friend on the West coast who is a chemistry professor and another with a degree in physics. I know some of the stereotypical confusion of which you speak.

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