The first one I would have skipped and told the teacher we decided not to do it because it was stupid. The second one should have been 3+3=6 6-3=3 I would think.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you give examples of the kinds of problems your first grader has been given? My first grader is currently doing math mountains and word problems, not complex stuff for a parent to figure out at all.
Here are a couple of examples she gets from school. This is the kind where I go "what the f--- ?" On the bottom one I think they were told by the teacher to use only two numbers, not three. She wouldn't have thought of this herself.
![]()
![]()
Anonymous wrote:I haven't read all the responses, but I recognize the math curriculum as I teach it in fourth grade. It looks like go math. I just want to say it is not a terrible curriculum, but it is challenging. It challenges all my students, which is one of the reasons I like it. All of our assessments are word problems. I think that is great. Kids really need to think. I can really tell who the bright students are--they are the ones who think. Your child who is struggling is still learning the math, but they will continue to do poorly until they learn how to reason. It is that simple.

Anonymous wrote:
This. These strategies are mental math tricks. Highly effective in understanding numbers. Countries who do well on PISA tend to emphasize these a lot more. I grew up in China and did all sorts of calculations like this.
Anonymous wrote:I supplement my first grader's math at home. We use Singapore math with a bit of Kumon worksheets to reinforce the material.
At home DD is doing well, a bit above her grade level.
At school they follow Common Core and her grades started to go down. I'm very puzzled. I think a lot of the time she doesn't understand the instructions which can be very confusing. Sometimes I read CC worksheets and think "wtf?"
Do you have any advice what to do?
Anonymous wrote:
THere's no indication that teachers really understand these newfangled strategies, either, which are simply gimmicks.
You an crow about "critical thinking" but I don't see any of that with Common Core math standards or the accompanying curriculums trotted out to support it.
Anonymous wrote:
THere's no indication that teachers really understand these newfangled strategies, either, which are simply gimmicks.
You an crow about "critical thinking" but I don't see any of that with Common Core math standards or the accompanying curriculums trotted out to support it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:but you might use doubles to solve 47+58: Break down 58 into 3+50+5 and then combine 47+3 to get 50, use doubles to get 50+50=100, then add the 5 to get the answer of 105.
My math teacher would be appalled at such a clumsy, inefficient, ridiculous solution. I'd get a C for this in best case scenario.
But in CC worksheets this kind of math is acceptable. That's the problem with the curriculum. This is an example of CC I found on Reddit:
Anonymous wrote:Barely understand? I'm computer scientist. Do you know the level of math knowledge that requires? Do you know how I'm able to do it? Because I had a strong math foundation at school.Anonymous wrote:These threads always drive home for me how much we need higher math standards, whether CC or otherwise. A generation of parents who, for the most part, barely understand math, and yet still want their kids to learn it just like they did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:but you might use doubles to solve 47+58: Break down 58 into 3+50+5 and then combine 47+3 to get 50, use doubles to get 50+50=100, then add the 5 to get the answer of 105.
My math teacher would be appalled at such a clumsy, inefficient, ridiculous solution. I'd get a C for this in best case scenario.
But in CC worksheets this kind of math is acceptable. That's the problem with the curriculum. This is an example of CC I found on Reddit:
Anonymous wrote:Barely understand? I'm computer scientist. Do you know the level of math knowledge that requires? Do you know how I'm able to do it? Because I had a strong math foundation at school.Anonymous wrote:These threads always drive home for me how much we need higher math standards, whether CC or otherwise. A generation of parents who, for the most part, barely understand math, and yet still want their kids to learn it just like they did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
If I were older than 9 doing math this way, I might agree. But not for a 6/7 yr old. BTW, I am in IT, and when I try to explain to my ES kids what I do for a living, my explanation is long, much longer than how I would explain it to an adult. Why? Because young kids don't understand much about computers or business, just like they have limited exposure to number sense.
This is not how math works. Math is all about simplification. You're not teaching the right principles from the start.
Barely understand? I'm computer scientist. Do you know the level of math knowledge that requires? Do you know how I'm able to do it? Because I had a strong math foundation at school.Anonymous wrote:These threads always drive home for me how much we need higher math standards, whether CC or otherwise. A generation of parents who, for the most part, barely understand math, and yet still want their kids to learn it just like they did.