Anonymous wrote:A large, and often overlooked, part of mathematics is the ability to speak "the language" of mathematics correctly. If your education taught you only to value a correct answer, you probably did not study much advanced math, where the focus is (rightfully) less on a single, ultimate, final number, and more on the actual proof and application of logical processes to come to a conclusion. Mathematical proofs have a grammar and syntax all their own and the study of more advanced mathematics should rightfully focus on a student's ability to use them to communicate the process of finding solutions correctly, as well as expressing those solutions in the correct form.
If mathematics was only concerned with answers, there would be no need to study it at all, since calculators and computers can find solutions much more quickly and accurately. If you want your child to learn mathematics well, then she will need to pay attention to these small errors and correct them, same as she would fix spelling mistakes in Language Arts. You would not argue that spelling and grammar make no difference in writing, as long as you can understand the conclusion, would you? So why are you promoting that idea for mathematics?
Anonymous wrote:A large, and often overlooked, part of mathematics is the ability to speak "the language" of mathematics correctly. If your education taught you only to value a correct answer, you probably did not study much advanced math, where the focus is (rightfully) less on a single, ultimate, final number, and more on the actual proof and application of logical processes to come to a conclusion. Mathematical proofs have a grammar and syntax all their own and the study of more advanced mathematics should rightfully focus on a student's ability to use them to communicate the process of finding solutions correctly, as well as expressing those solutions in the correct form.
If mathematics was only concerned with answers, there would be no need to study it at all, since calculators and computers can find solutions much more quickly and accurately. If you want your child to learn mathematics well, then she will need to pay attention to these small errors and correct them, same as she would fix spelling mistakes in Language Arts. You would not argue that spelling and grammar make no difference in writing, as long as you can understand the conclusion, would you? So why are you promoting that idea for mathematics?
Anonymous wrote:Attention to detail is very important in math and many math heavy careers. Leaving off the “x=“ is akin to not including units. The number by itself means nothing. Hopefully she now has a better understanding of the teachers expectations and won’t make this mistake again. Even if she doesn’t end up in a math heavy career, this type of attention to detail and checking her work will pay off in almost all aspects of life. You should encourage her to meet the challenge and have her practice correcting details in her work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP,
A few things. For one, if you have any questions about DD's teacher's grading, ask the teacher about it. You can set up a conference through email. Secondly, we've all had bad teachers. It's a fact of life. Some teachers are actually horrible. So, maybe tell DD you understand her frustration but to tough it out until the end of the year. You can't shield DD from everything. But you should definitely talk to the teacher because that situation does seem kind of odd.
Thanks, we’ve tried. I had to ask here because discussions with the teacher have not been productive. Very defensive and not at all any technical discussion or reasoning. Just that it’s not them, it’s how FCPS does it. Maybe that’s the case, but seems unfair to grade down for yes/no instead of true/false when the question clearly asks for yes/no as the answer. Why write both? I’m starting to wonder if they’re going off of an answer key and marking every little thing that doesn’t match up.
We’re trying to determine if it’s worth asking to be placed with a different teacher next year or if it’s graded this way consistently.
Anonymous wrote:OP,
A few things. For one, if you have any questions about DD's teacher's grading, ask the teacher about it. You can set up a conference through email. Secondly, we've all had bad teachers. It's a fact of life. Some teachers are actually horrible. So, maybe tell DD you understand her frustration but to tough it out until the end of the year. You can't shield DD from everything. But you should definitely talk to the teacher because that situation does seem kind of odd.