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Elementary School-Aged Kids
Reply to "Is this problem too hard for a second grader?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]It is the stupid new way they teach math now. They should be memorizing the facts first the way math has always been taught.[/quote] I am sorry. Where's the proof in American education and worldwide standings, and our overall success in math, that shows that the old way actually worked?[/quote] I agree with both of you, PPs. The old way didn't work, but will the new way? When did the change it? I have 20- year olds at work who can't figure out basic math. OP, I think kids get it that the candies are divided between kids or whatever the problem is. They get it! There is no need to have them draw up 100 candies for more than once. They get the concept even with 20 candies. I'd be tired too when drawing the 80th candy. I feel like there's a lot of playing around and not enough memorizing. I had the times table memorized, my 4th grader doesn't. I think he does fine on the first half, for 2nd half he has to think to come up with the answer. In my experience American kids do and see so much more than we ever did, but they were still bad at math in college. We just had pen, paper and chalk blackboard back at home. [b]We never saw a worksheet or multiple choice question.[/b] My kid is in 4th grade and his math homework has him do the same thing over and over again. He got it, let's move on. We on the other hand had the teacher recite the problem. We had to pick out the numbers from the story and makes sure the answer makes sense. For what it's worth, my country is near top 10 in math according to Pisa. We even beat Finland. I was in humanities class in high school. We only had 3 math classes a week, so I'd say I know only middle school math. But at work I'm asked to help every time somebody can't figure out how to calculate something. As I'm showing them how to do it, I do tell them the rules. So the rules have stuck with me. We learned nothing extra, there were no nice colored pictures on the math book. We just learned the foundation, the main rules and we learned them well. Maybe there's too much extra stuff in math curriculum and kids can't figure out what's important and worth knowing or memorizing. Sorry for being all over the place, but I'm really interested in finding out where does the US math curriculum go wrong. I just ordered my kid's math book and I will bring one from Europe. [/quote] You already have the answer as to why you were able to LEARN math. [/quote]
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