We are thrilled to invite you to an exclusive, free screening of Counted Out hosted in Dallas, Texas by MathFinder, a collaborative project of Southern Methodist University and talkSTEM.
Join us for an enlightening evening for educators, students, institutions and organizations showcasing Counted Out, a new hard-hitting documentary that shines a light on math as the foundation of democracy and economic opportunity. Learn more about MathFinder and a chance to engage in a short Q&A following the film.
Seating space limited: RSVP Today!
About “Counted Out”
“Counted Out” investigates the biggest crises of our time. Political polarization. Racial biases. Social injustice. Economic inequity. Climate change. And a global pandemic. All viewed through a previously unseen lens: math.
In our current information economy, math is everywhere.The people we date, the news we see, the influence of our votes, the candidates who win elections, the education we can access, the jobs we get is all underwritten by an invisible layer of math that few of us understand, or even notice.
But whether we know it or not, our numeric literacy — whether we can speak the language of math — is a critical determinant of social and economic power.
Through a mosaic of personal stories, expert interviews, and scenes of math transformation in action, “Counted Out” shows what’s at risk if we keep the status quo. Do we want an America in which most of us don’t consider ourselves “math people?” Where math proficiency goes down as students grow up? Or do we want a country where everyone can understand the math that undergirds our society — and can help shape it?
The film’s voices include the late civil rights icon Robert Moses as well as Talithia Williams, associate professor of mathematics at Harvey Mudd University and TEDx speaker of “Own Your Body’s Data,” Julia Angwin, investigative journalist and founder of Proof, Steven Levitt, co-author of “Freakonomics.”
Watch the Counted Out Film Trailer
Click to Read more about Why Democracy Lives and Dies by Math Article in The New York Times
From the Director of Counted Out: Vicki Abeles
Two of my previous films are stories rooted in education, and this one started out that way. I began with a curiosity about how math is taught in the classroom—why so many students fear it, and why math proficiency in America lags so far behind other countries, even at a time when math is central to our technological society.
As production began, however, I learned that a film about the way math is taught—and how we learn it—ends up being a film about so much more than classrooms. It’s about who is encouraged and supported on the journey to math literacy, and who drops out of the math pipeline. It’s about why some of us learn early to distance ourselves from math fields, unwittingly closing off doors of opportunity to hundreds of exciting careers in science, engineering, technology, medicine, and media. It’s about how math forms the scaffolding that supports our institutions. It’s about math’s critical role in (literally) holding up our infrastructure and cities, and about its impact on our electoral process, news ecosystem, dating sites, social media feeds, housing market, and prisons.
Ultimately it’s a film that poses a question fundamental to democracy: if we can’t understand a system that governs us, how much power do we actually have?
In my quest to understand math’s critical role in our lives, I uncovered a movement of scholars, activists, and educators who also see math as more than an academic subject. For them, math
is a tool for understanding and harnessing the beauty, wonder, and possibility of the world we live in. And our lack of access to that tool is, in their view, the critical civil rights issue of our time.
In making the film, I was honored to meet the civil rights hero Bob Moses, one of the greatest inspirations in the ongoing fight to make education equitable. The film includes some of the last
interviews of his life as he invites us inside the work of his groundbreaking Algebra Project.
Moses advocated for shifting the power dynamics of learning, just as he’d done during his voter-registration work in the ‘60s. The results of his work have been transformative, and our film is dedicated to him.
In making Counted Out, I learned that we have a math crisis in America, but that it’s a crisis whose solution is at our fingertips. As we capture the knowledge, organizing, and wherewithal of
those who are advocating for widespread math literacy, we can unleash something else: the power of all of us to shape the world we’re living in.