Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the effect of her not doing all the problems in the alloted time? Speed drills are common, and useful for building fluency. There's probably no expectation that every kid gets them all done.
She certainly *thinks* she's expected to be able to do them all, based on the messages she's getting from her teacher.
What is the effect? They are graded and listed in ParentVue, bringing her overall grade down (most of the rest of her math grades are As, but her overall grade is a C, primarily because of these drills). *I* don't care about grades that much, but *she* does - it's hard not to feel bad when your worksheets are sent home with a giant red "47%" marked on them.
She's developed worsening anxiety about math in general and these tests in particular. It's killing her self confidence and any enthusiasm she may once have had for learning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you looked into tutoring for your daughter? MCPS provides some options for free.
Then on the private side, there's Mathnasium, Kumon, etc.
My daughter does not NEED tutoring. She knows her math facts and understands the material just fine, if anything she is advanced in math - she's just got slow processing. Rote memorization is not required for math fact fluency, and speed drills are not an effective way to teach - math anxiety actually *worsens* working memory, processing, and problem solving.
So what outcome are you seeking? To make her eliminate math drills completely for the whole class or to excuse your child from the math drills?
Anonymous wrote:What is the effect of her not doing all the problems in the alloted time? Speed drills are common, and useful for building fluency. There's probably no expectation that every kid gets them all done.
Anonymous wrote:My 4th grader gets speed drills every couple of weeks from her math teacher that are causing a ton of stress. She's actually fine with math facts/fluency based on what we see at home, but is not particularly fast, and she does really poorly under the added pressure of these timed drills. Usually the goal is 40 problems in one minute which seems absurd to me, an adult who is really good at math. The teacher also makes them do every problem in order - she's not supposed to jump around or skip problems.
These are *not* the sprints in her Eureka books; they are separate worksheets/quizzes that I assume are generated by the teacher directly. They are graded and recorded in ParentVue as "Multiplication Facts - Assignment"; she's had 5 so far this quarter, all Ds. (She's in compacted math, if it matters, but I believe the non-compacted class taught by the same teacher gets them too.)
My DD absolutely hates math now, and its starting to spill over into her feelings about the rest of school. Is there any use complaining?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you looked into tutoring for your daughter? MCPS provides some options for free.
Then on the private side, there's Mathnasium, Kumon, etc.
My daughter does not NEED tutoring. She knows her math facts and understands the material just fine, if anything she is advanced in math - she's just got slow processing. Rote memorization is not required for math fact fluency, and speed drills are not an effective way to teach - math anxiety actually *worsens* working memory, processing, and problem solving.
Anonymous wrote:Have you looked into tutoring for your daughter? MCPS provides some options for free.
Then on the private side, there's Mathnasium, Kumon, etc.
Anonymous wrote:My 4th grader gets speed drills every couple of weeks from her math teacher that are causing a ton of stress. She's actually fine with math facts/fluency based on what we see at home, but is not particularly fast, and she does really poorly under the added pressure of these timed drills. Usually the goal is 40 problems in one minute which seems absurd to me, an adult who is really good at math. The teacher also makes them do every problem in order - she's not supposed to jump around or skip problems.
These are *not* the sprints in her Eureka books; they are separate worksheets/quizzes that I assume are generated by the teacher directly. They are graded and recorded in ParentVue as "Multiplication Facts - Assignment"; she's had 5 so far this quarter, all Ds. (She's in compacted math, if it matters, but I believe the non-compacted class taught by the same teacher gets them too.)
My DD absolutely hates math now, and its starting to spill over into her feelings about the rest of school. Is there any use complaining?