Tag Archives: publishing

The Employability of a Math Major

Moons ago, while attending an NCTM conference, I received a tote bag with a slogan that read something like Do Math and You Can Do Anything! if my memory hadn’t deserted me. I suppose most attendees or geeks then were proud carrying their complimentary bag around to promote their favorite subject.

Meme © Anon.

Today, it’s not uncommon to spot math-positive slogans or motivational messages like Math is everywhere! and Math Rocks! Or even acronyms-turned-mathematical such as MATH (Make America Think Harder!) and MAGA (Make America Geometric Again!).

When I brought the low-quality bag home, my wife commented that the “math-is-everything” message is rubbish or even sounds pretty “elitist,” probably hinting to me that we, math people, are quasi-useless in most things practical other than gossiping about numbers and their relationships.

Over the years, with one foot on teaching and another on editing, I realize that most math graduates, especially math teachers or educators, are often an “uncreative” or risk-averse lot even if a good proportion of them hold a relatively safe but oft-unexciting job, each drawing a decent salary.

From Teaching to Publishing

Even those who’ve left teaching to join publishing as a math editor, the transition is anything but smooth, simply because teaching skills aren’t transferable to editing (or rewriting) skills. In fact, it’s quasi-axiomatic to say that most math teachers struggle writing a grammatically correct email, much less feel competent or confident enough to editing an ill-written or half-baked manuscript.

Of course, with the double-edge AI, it’s going to be harder to differentiate between fake and genuine math editors, especially those who’d bought or used faked degrees to secure an editorial position, who could now deliver an AI-assisted or better edited manuscript than most senior editors or managing editors, who might condescendingly think that generative AI is only reserved for second- or third-rate editors.

I couldn’t disagree with a number of small or family-owned publishers that comment that the better math editors are often those who’ve quasi-zero school teaching experience, compared to their peers who’ve formally taught or tutored a number of years, which seems like an odd observation or conclusion to outsiders. Most people incorrectly assume that ex-math teachers or tutors would be a better bet or choice to be recruited as math editors.

A Xmas gift for math-anxious folks!

Math Educators Are Poor Marketers

It’s no surprise that 99.99% of math educators are lousy at sales and marketing, which is often used as a simplistic excuse to justify or rationalize why their books or courses fail to attract a wider audience.

This is why I think math teachers and tutors ought to take up some discreet projects or gigs in the private sector to brush up their writing, reviewing, and presentation skills.

In general, the school milieu or academia tends to be a sanctuary for mediocre math teachers or educators with average communication skills (presentation, writing, editing, …). A few years’ stint out of the relatively cozy school system, say in competitive hire-or-fire publishing, would enhance their writing and editing skills a few folds.

The ruthless jungle of publishing—with all its politicking, backstabbing, and ghostwriting—serves as a fertile ground to improving someone’s editing, writing, presenting, and coaching skills, especially if they desire to venture into full-time writing and consulting in later years.

Creatively & wisely yours

© Yan Kow Cheong, July 21, 2025.

How Is Your Mathematical Journey?

Does your mathematical journey so far look like one that is anything but a straight line? Welcome to the club!

Cartoon © Grant Snider

Not just to think out of the box, we often need to be (forcefully) thrown out of our cubicle if we truly want to be creative (or positively destructive).

It’s not easy to step out of our comfort zone, but it’s far better than living our mathematical life in a box, or under a half-witted boss or inept HOD.

Are we prepared to live differently from the way the Ministry of Education or the school or the publisher wants you to work? Each of these places doesn’t want you to rock the boat.

Are you still waiting until you got time to start working on that manuscript or time to read those math classics or bestsellers you’d have already read—if you wait for the (right?) time, the chances that you’ll never do it.

Long to indulge in some math poetry? Or volunteer as a math tutor in your community? Or set up that math clinic to help symbols-phobic sufferers by educating them that math is more psychological than logical? What’s preventing you? Family? Gym? Your daily dose of Nexflix or LinkedIn news?

A Math E-Card

Live your [mathematical] life the way you want to be lived rather than live it the way others want you to live it. Don’t wait for permission—it’ll never come.

Maybe we can all learn a thing or two from “chosen & anointed” Trump: Disrupt, dismiss, and destroy—in the positive sense!

It’s never too late to be an odd in a sea of evens!

Purposefully yours

© Yan Kow Cheong, January 26, 2025