Mise
isle of lucy
I don't understand your complaint at all Quackers. If "common core" materially improves children's ability to do basic arithmetic, then how can this possibly be a bad thing?
I don't understand your complaint at all Quackers. If "common core" materially improves children's ability to do basic arithmetic, then how can this possibly be a bad thing?
FlyingPig said:'Innumerate' doesn't mean 'can't do any sums'
innumerate
ɪˈnjuːm(ərət/
adjective
adjective: innumerate
1.
without a basic knowledge of mathematics and arithmetic.
"to this day I am practically innumerate"
noun
in·nu·mer·ate
adjective \-rət\
: unable to understand and do basic mathematics
Well, you say you're questioning it, but it sounds like you made up your mind about it first, then asked the question later...
That's exactly how I add up.... I mean, that is literally, word for word, what I do when I add 26 + 17. I was taught a stupid method of adding 7 to 6 and carrying a 1, then adding 2 and 1 then adding the carried 1. But that method there, the one that I actually use, is a hell of a lot more intuitive for me.
Didn't you literally just invoke the method which Mise and I use as one of these fancy new methods? And you also admitted that different people find different methods easier? So why on earth not teach lots of methods and let children use whichever they prefer?
It sounds entirely plausible to me that [maths teachers] know a lot more about how to teach maths than I do.
That's exactly how I add up.... I mean, that is literally, word for word, what I do when I add 26 + 17. I was taught a stupid method of adding 7 to 6 and carrying a 1, then adding 2 and 1 then adding the carried 1.
I'd do the other way round: first add 10, getting 36, then add 7.Personally, my method (i know you're interested) is adding the 7 from 17 to 26, making 33 and then adding the 10.
See, I don't even use it on pen & paper... I pretty much just add them up in the same way: group all the 10s first (quick wins), then add and subtract from each other number so that they make groups of 10s, then add whatever's left over.I think the "stupid" method is for when you have a pencil and paper. It's a more useful method when you are calculating the sum of more than one number at a time since you don't have to hold all the rounding corrections somewhere. Though, doing the above mentally, I did a version of what you do. I stripped the 7 off the second number to make it an even 10 then added it back.
The common core will also teach this method. That's also my method.I'd do the other way round: first add 10, getting 36, then add 7.![]()
The common core will also teach this method as well I think.I actually round down to the nearest five then add the remainder. 25+15+3 = 43
It is a slight variant on the traditional method.
The common core example I posted is practically an abomination. Designed to make children even more confused.
Also, I acknowledge Mise and yourself used different methods but the pair of you have learned under the old system (and FP the ancient system#rekt), so being taught one method won't keep you locked into that way of doing sums. Being taught the Common Core method will just confuse everyone.