Anonymous wrote:OP - are you sure the question didn't ask him to estimate to the nearest hundredth? Usually the questions I've seen tell you where to estimate to ones place, tenth place, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. So I asked my DC to explain to me how he did it after showing him this question in the report. He said he estimated 854 to 850, and 349 to 350, (i.e rounding both to nearest tens) and that's why he got 500. I told him that's great and that he is correct (and he should not worry about being marked wrong as 600 is a ridiculous estimate when 500 is one of the choices).
I don't think I have anymore faith left in how math is taught in our schools (never mind it's supposed to be an aap class). I was initially thinking in emailing and asking the teacher but realized it's probably not even their fault at all, as it's auto graded, and there is no point anyways as she couldn't/wouldn't do anything about it. The testing program appears to be called "Horizon Assessment System", so I don't think the teacher even had anything to do with the question. I'm just so glad he logically thought it out and didn't answer something stupid like 600.
Telling him that makes you feel better but doesn't really help him.
He's in 3rd grade. What he learns now is important to him but won't last for a lifetime. Let his teacher teach him. If you teach him to ignore what his teacher teaches him, he will consistently answer incorrectly on all of his tests, which might make you feel better but won't help him
Anonymous wrote:OP here. So I asked my DC to explain to me how he did it after showing him this question in the report. He said he estimated 854 to 850, and 349 to 350, (i.e rounding both to nearest tens) and that's why he got 500. I told him that's great and that he is correct (and he should not worry about being marked wrong as 600 is a ridiculous estimate when 500 is one of the choices).
I don't think I have anymore faith left in how math is taught in our schools (never mind it's supposed to be an aap class). I was initially thinking in emailing and asking the teacher but realized it's probably not even their fault at all, as it's auto graded, and there is no point anyways as she couldn't/wouldn't do anything about it. The testing program appears to be called "Horizon Assessment System", so I don't think the teacher even had anything to do with the question. I'm just so glad he logically thought it out and didn't answer something stupid like 600.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. So I asked my DC to explain to me how he did it after showing him this question in the report. He said he estimated 854 to 850, and 349 to 350, (i.e rounding both to nearest tens) and that's why he got 500. I told him that's great and that he is correct (and he should not worry about being marked wrong as 600 is a ridiculous estimate when 500 is one of the choices).
I don't think I have anymore faith left in how math is taught in our schools (never mind it's supposed to be an aap class). I was initially thinking in emailing and asking the teacher but realized it's probably not even their fault at all, as it's auto graded, and there is no point anyways as she couldn't/wouldn't do anything about it. The testing program appears to be called "Horizon Assessment System", so I don't think the teacher even had anything to do with the question. I'm just so glad he logically thought it out and didn't answer something stupid like 600.
Telling him that makes you feel better but doesn't really help him.
He's in 3rd grade. What he learns now is important to him but won't last for a lifetime. Let his teacher teach him. If you teach him to ignore what his teacher teaches him, he will consistently answer incorrectly on all of his tests, which might make you feel better but won't help him
I told him that I'm glad he made a thoughtful choice vs relying on anything rote.Anonymous wrote:OP here. So I asked my DC to explain to me how he did it after showing him this question in the report. He said he estimated 854 to 850, and 349 to 350, (i.e rounding both to nearest tens) and that's why he got 500. I told him that's great and that he is correct (and he should not worry about being marked wrong as 600 is a ridiculous estimate when 500 is one of the choices).
I don't think I have anymore faith left in how math is taught in our schools (never mind it's supposed to be an aap class). I was initially thinking in emailing and asking the teacher but realized it's probably not even their fault at all, as it's auto graded, and there is no point anyways as she couldn't/wouldn't do anything about it. The testing program appears to be called "Horizon Assessment System", so I don't think the teacher even had anything to do with the question. I'm just so glad he logically thought it out and didn't answer something stupid like 600.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:854 rounds to 900
349 rounds to 300
900 - 300 = 600
It makes more sense to say 54-39 is negligible (estimation to beast hundred, so 15 rounds to zero) and 800-300=500
Anonymous wrote:854 rounds to 900
349 rounds to 300
900 - 300 = 600