Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids with learning disabilities get very confused by being taught multiple ways to solve problems like this. Just teach them one way that works for them. I understand the need for number sense, but if your child gets confused, just stick with one way.
+1 It's good to know how to solve something 10 different ways as long as they also know a single consistent, fast method.
I have a rising 5th grader who struggles in math and she once was told to pick her favorite way to solve 14*12. Unfortunately, her "favorite" was to add 12 fourteen times because she didn't really understand what we would view as the standard multi-digit multiplication algorithm since it was presented as just 1 method out of a bunch of different ones, not the default. Her other favorite was lattice multiplication, which I tend to think of as a cool trick but realistically wouldn't be super efficient for solving 14568*459, for example. But the teacher never told them to pick just one and practice it for speed and fluency, so nothing ever really stuck.
Anonymous wrote:Kids with learning disabilities get very confused by being taught multiple ways to solve problems like this. Just teach them one way that works for them. I understand the need for number sense, but if your child gets confused, just stick with one way.
Anonymous wrote:If they understand one way, have them do it that way. This idea that we have to teach a million ways to do the same thing is ridiculous. If your child is presented with a subtraction problems and can repeatedly successfully solve them, it is good. My child also gets confused with multiple strategies.
The only challenge is that without textbooks, I have a hard time assisting my child with the language and methods they are being taught. I was raised on borrowing and carrying, so when I try to explain it that way, we get nowhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please do not teach this nonsense of “borrowing & paying back.” What’s best for your kid is to develop a solid conceptual understanding of regrouping in a base ten system. What’s best is for your kid to be a flexible thinker and to pick which strategy is the most efficient to solve the problem in front of them.
For example: If presented with 1002-997=___, the most efficient strategy is NOT to set it up vertically and regroup. The most efficient way to solve this subtraction problem is to simply “add up.” 998-999-1000-1001-1002. The answer is 5.
NP. So what I end up doing for a problem like that is to say, in my head “ok 997 to 1,000 is 3 and then 1,000 to 1,002 is 2, so 3+2=5.” I don’t have a school-aged kid, so I don’t know if that’s how they’re teaching it to kids these days, but it’s definitely how I think about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they understand one way, have them do it that way. This idea that we have to teach a million ways to do the same thing is ridiculous. If your child is presented with a subtraction problems and can repeatedly successfully solve them, it is good. My child also gets confused with multiple strategies.
The only challenge is that without textbooks, I have a hard time assisting my child with the language and methods they are being taught. I was raised on borrowing and carrying, so when I try to explain it that way, we get nowhere.
A million ways is the way to true number literacy. Which is the important part and not being able to do just one kind of problem one way. The way many of us were taught were very limiting. It was procedural and not drilling down to true math understanding. The current way is actually better but harder in the beginning. It leads to better number understanding. It's also the way people were taught a couple generations back and in other countries.
Anonymous wrote:If they understand one way, have them do it that way. This idea that we have to teach a million ways to do the same thing is ridiculous. If your child is presented with a subtraction problems and can repeatedly successfully solve them, it is good. My child also gets confused with multiple strategies.
The only challenge is that without textbooks, I have a hard time assisting my child with the language and methods they are being taught. I was raised on borrowing and carrying, so when I try to explain it that way, we get nowhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please do not teach this nonsense of “borrowing & paying back.” What’s best for your kid is to develop a solid conceptual understanding of regrouping in a base ten system. What’s best is for your kid to be a flexible thinker and to pick which strategy is the most efficient to solve the problem in front of them.
For example: If presented with 1002-997=___, the most efficient strategy is NOT to set it up vertically and regroup. The most efficient way to solve this subtraction problem is to simply “add up.” 998-999-1000-1001-1002. The answer is 5.
NP. So what I end up doing for a problem like that is to say, in my head “ok 997 to 1,000 is 3 and then 1,000 to 1,002 is 2, so 3+2=5.” I don’t have a school-aged kid, so I don’t know if that’s how they’re teaching it to kids these days, but it’s definitely how I think about it.
Anonymous wrote:Please do not teach this nonsense of “borrowing & paying back.” What’s best for your kid is to develop a solid conceptual understanding of regrouping in a base ten system. What’s best is for your kid to be a flexible thinker and to pick which strategy is the most efficient to solve the problem in front of them.
For example: If presented with 1002-997=___, the most efficient strategy is NOT to set it up vertically and regroup. The most efficient way to solve this subtraction problem is to simply “add up.” 998-999-1000-1001-1002. The answer is 5.