MCPS doesn't want students learning at home. That exacerbates inequality, because rich kids have more time and support at home than poor kids. |
| Eureka has not been great for my 4th grader, who has some attention issues. It's missing the forest for the trees. Learning basic math facts is a life skill. You need to have your basic math facts memorized in order to do simple calculations at the grocery store, when cooking, when budgeting. Once I realized she didn't have good fluency in basic math facts, I began drilling her starting last year. I think with persistently drilling her, she will eventually achieve fluency. How many kids is Eureka missing though-whose parents won't be drilling them at home |
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Wait, as someone who does not have a kid old enough for this stuff yet: do kids not memorize math facts anymore?
Seems like the goal should be to teach kids the concepts behind the math AND have them memorize math facts, so they can do more advanced math more easily. |
She found that Chinese teachers tended to have deeper subject knowledge and used that not only to teach the individual concepts, but also to consider how the concepts fit together. American teachers focused more superficially on teaching specific methods, but weren’t generally very good at teaching the math concept underlying the method (and might not even understand it themselves). I highly recommend the book. More than an interesting comparison of two different educational cultures, it also offers great insight into effective educational practices. |
Unfortunately some educators have adopted and implemented a philosophy that memorization is bad. So there has been a notable shift away from memorization in math instruction, in favor of (in my opinion) for complex and time consuming systems that lead to the math facts rather than memorizing the math facts. But there's been pushback on whether that's right or not in education circles. |
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This comedian explains it so well. Ha!
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That's an oft-repeated opinion, and not one that I'm certain is the case. Unsure if this was a troll, but... If the aim is equity, they do a disservice in effectively limiting the supports a family might be able to provide without significant personal cost, leaving only those with means the ability to pursue enrichment outside the MCPS framework. While that may, on the face of it, mean less difference between the middle and the lower end of the economic scale via impeding the former, it would mean greater difference between them both and those on the higher end. Few would see that as the real underlying objective, even if it may be the unfortunate result of occult policy positions promoted by shortsighted overseers. Personally, I haven't had teachers ask us not to pursue help at home. Quite the opposite -- we've been asked to review regularly with our kids. (Not a W, btw, in case that matters to anyone.) They don't really have much to which they can point us, though, beyond the tip sheets and Khan Academy. |
Yes, kids memorize math facts. |
No, that's not true. |
MCPs disagrees. MCPS never ever tested my kids on their times tables. |
+1. Kids are taught and required to memorize the math facts. They are also taught how to solve for them. Both are needed skills so folks can understand underlying math concepts and do higher level math. |
Correction, a specific teacher may or may not have tested your child. It’s certainly not a district wide phenomenon. |
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The back and forth about math facts reminds me of similar debates on whether or not MCPS taught grammar. In that case, although MCPS’s curriculum discouraged formal, systematic grammar instruction, teachers often compensated for the shortfall. I know this because I was on the curriculum committee, and when I asked my children’s teachers every year on back to school night whether they taught grammar, they’d usually hem and haw a little, maybe glance around, and then say because they realized it was important they made a point to teach grammar (while trying not to criticize MCPS). I even had one teacher say that she used the grammar curriculum from the private school her daughter attended. While my child, and many others may have had grammar instruction, possibly at a high level, that instruction was in spite of MCPS, not because of it. Moreover, it was entirely teacher dependent. If a teacher wasn’t strong, themselves, in grammar, or didn’t want to risk career problems by diverging from MCPS’s official curriculum and practices, their students might not have been so fortunate. (This was under an old curriculum. I don’t know the current status of grammar instruction under the new curriculum.)
With the disagreement about whether or not math facts are required, we may be facing a similar situation. MCPS may not require memorization of basic facts, but many teachers may do it anyway. Conversely, the situation might be that MCPS wants students to memorize basic facts, but for whatever reason an individual teacher might have, they’re not requiring their students to do so. If you feel this is a relevant issue for your child, I highly recommend you directly ask the teacher if they will require your students to memorize the basic facts. |
Or, you know, simply work on math facts with your child. At worst, it will reinforce what they're learning in class. |
Which is why it was suggested to get the family/parent sheets sent home. If someone can’t follow those for ES math, then that individual does not understand the underlying math concept themself. At which point it would be better to inform the school teacher/math specialist about the kids struggles. No teacher or district is expecting parents to have to learn and teach a subject. |