Anonymous wrote:My one question is.....if all these new methods of teaching math are so great, why do math test scores keep declining? Maybe memorizing times tables is the way to go.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I were floored when our 2nd grader explained to us that in a problem like: 13+9 he'd change it to 19+3 to solve, by switching the ones. We asked if the teacher taught him, but he said that he thought of it. (Don't know if this is true.) We were completely stunned because we'd never thought of that because we were taught to memorize algorithms.
I'm in the arts, but wish I'd learned math this way. Someone posted a video on this site recently about how you can take a double digit multiplication problem and how to draw it into an area equation. Very cool to think about math in this way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My one question is.....if all these new methods of teaching math are so great, why do math test scores keep declining? Maybe memorizing times tables is the way to go.
They do memorize math facts as well. Third grade is going through the fast fact multiplication tests right now.
Anonymous wrote:My one question is.....if all these new methods of teaching math are so great, why do math test scores keep declining? Maybe memorizing times tables is the way to go.
Anonymous wrote:I know, op. Im am asain american and nearly 40. I learned math the way it was taught in the 89s. Was never good at doing anything in my head. My mom tried to teach me the way shed leaned back in the old country, and its a lot similar to how my daughter is now learning it. I feel cheated that we were never taught/trained to solve problems this way. I was always a midling student in science and math.
That said, im a bit nervous about how they may be teaching English and writing now. Seems to be taking some of the deeper thinking abd creativity out of it, all diagraming sentences, outlining, topic sentences, beginning, middle, end. Blah. I havent actually seen this, just suspect this is what happens in older grades based on what Ive heard. Would have completely turned me off as a student.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 4th grader was having trouble doing 2 digit multiplication. I tried to help him but he kept saying I was doing it wrong. Apparently it is done very differently now and I most likely only confused him further. Frustrating that I could not help him with his homework.
I have also struggled with this with my fourth grader.
When I don't know the method he's using, I check the answer using my method; if it's different, I have him go back and check his work, ideally explaining it to me in the process. Usually it's just a simple calculation mistake.
I also think asking your kid to explain the techniques he's learned is really helpful--it helps cement the concept in his mind, and it reveals where he might be uncertain. My son explained the area model to me, which I'd never seen before, and now I get it (and know he gets it, too).
Anonymous wrote:My 4th grader was having trouble doing 2 digit multiplication. I tried to help him but he kept saying I was doing it wrong. Apparently it is done very differently now and I most likely only confused him further. Frustrating that I could not help him with his homework.