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mnhtnbb

(31,450 posts)
279. I'm 64 and still remember getting an "F" on a 4th grade math test.
Thu Oct 22, 2015, 11:17 AM
Oct 2015

Last edited Thu Oct 22, 2015, 02:51 PM - Edit history (1)

Why? It was a test on long division and EVERY SINGLE answer I gave was correct.

I was given an "F" because I didn't show the work;
that was it for math for me. I hated it from then on.

Years later--along with other assistant administrators--I was in a budget meeting with the finance
director of the hospital where we worked. I took one look at a table of numbers and instinctively knew
it wasn't correct. Sat there with my pen and did the addition. Yup. Not right.

Scored quite a few bonus points that day. Screw that 4th grade teacher and her BS grading rules.



Why did they make it 5 x 3 and not 3 x 5? Rex Oct 2015 #1
Or give credit if a kid is smart enough to know that n * m = m * n and does the simpler computation karynnj Oct 2015 #6
No they didn't Egnever Oct 2015 #75
That is completely false -- 5 times 3 IS 3 times 5 by the commutative law - no matter how many karynnj Oct 2015 #103
and according to the order of operations Egnever Oct 2015 #107
No according to anything many many generations of students learned karynnj Oct 2015 #114
but failed reading comprehension? Egnever Oct 2015 #122
I have a graduate degree in Applied Mathematics karynnj Oct 2015 #129
Again reading comprehension fail Egnever Oct 2015 #130
ONLY given the method used to teach it karynnj Oct 2015 #134
Ok but the question wasn't are they equal. Egnever Oct 2015 #135
"should" defined by an arbitrary definition from the people who developed this way of teaching nt karynnj Oct 2015 #139
false choice, its not one or the other youceyec Oct 2015 #462
Eh, the kid was right about the math but did the teaching strategy in a different order. Chathamization Oct 2015 #168
Some of us who went on to get both undergraduate and graduate degrees in math Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #177
There is only one operation here - the child wrote it entirely correctly. Yo_Mama Oct 2015 #450
3x5 and 5x3 are mathmatically interchangable. Adrahil Oct 2015 #219
Does syntax matter? Renew Deal Oct 2015 #275
What the kid wrote corresponds to the most common axioms used for integer multiplication Chathamization Oct 2015 #285
I don't think so. Adrahil Oct 2015 #305
Not in this case, no. This problem doesn't have a syntax. Yo_Mama Oct 2015 #451
The commutative property of mathematics is not the concept being tested in the quiz. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #302
It's a stupid fucking test. Adrahil Oct 2015 #306
^^This^^ Gormy Cuss Oct 2015 #321
Algebra never made a bit of sense to me. Aerows Oct 2015 #411
Basic law of algebra is that addition and multiplication are order insensitive five added three time Monk06 Oct 2015 #155
Operational calculus requires proper order of operation. eom MohRokTah Oct 2015 #158
Quite correct. Adrahil Oct 2015 #308
Well I barely made it through Calculus 101 so there you go. Still don't understand this strategy vs Monk06 Oct 2015 #360
Thank goodness that everyone Aerows Oct 2015 #413
Yes, and any order is the proper order in multiplication/addition. n/t Yo_Mama Oct 2015 #455
OK--what's purple and commutes? eridani Oct 2015 #463
Apparently the repeated addition strategy is to take the right-hand number KamaAina Oct 2015 #2
But that rigidity obfuscates the fact that multiplication and addition are commutative pokerfan Oct 2015 #19
If only the kid had pointed that out KamaAina Oct 2015 #20
Or a D. hifiguy Oct 2015 #48
"New math" apparently means "arbitrary math" lumberjack_jeff Oct 2015 #26
But mathematically those things are IDENTICAL. Adrahil Oct 2015 #41
Exactly! Rex Oct 2015 #65
Not identical, just equal in their summation npk Oct 2015 #176
Beat me to it! Of course... TreasonousBastard Oct 2015 #194
Here's the thing... Adrahil Oct 2015 #212
Here's the other hing... TreasonousBastard Oct 2015 #225
I'm saying it doesn't matter... Adrahil Oct 2015 #236
I have an engineering brain, too Aerows Oct 2015 #422
what a horrible math teacher. youceyec Oct 2015 #461
3x5=5x3. Adrahil Oct 2015 #208
So, the problem here is "five multiplied by three" muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #210
This is addition/multiplication rather than subtraction/division. Yo_Mama Oct 2015 #452
Getting the rows/columns of a matrix right is NOT "just plain stupid". gcomeau Oct 2015 #393
But that negates the purpose of teaching this way!!!! Yo_Mama Oct 2015 #453
It could be that the teacher wanted the kid to show both ways of solving it. (nt) LostOne4Ever Oct 2015 #3
If the teacher wanted the kid to show both ways of solving it meow2u3 Oct 2015 #108
Probably because she told them what was expected from that type of problem in class nt LostOne4Ever Oct 2015 #128
The teacher subtracted a point from the score for using the 'wrong' way (nt) muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #211
The picture is the only clue we have LostOne4Ever Oct 2015 #343
No, the teacher wanted the kid to solve it in the way she did it (shown in purple). LisaL Oct 2015 #335
And we know that how? LostOne4Ever Oct 2015 #345
Because she showed it in purple right there on the sheet. LisaL Oct 2015 #350
Or that could be the other half of the problem she wanted LostOne4Ever Oct 2015 #352
No, it couldn't be. LisaL Oct 2015 #354
Why couldn't it be? LostOne4Ever Oct 2015 #356
Just read the instructions for repetead addition they are giving to kids. LisaL Oct 2015 #358
Again, that does not in anyway exclude my explanation LostOne4Ever Oct 2015 #363
The question doesn't say anything about solving the problem both ways. LisaL Oct 2015 #366
Nor does it say anything about not solving it both ways. It does show that the kid got half credit. LostOne4Ever Oct 2015 #371
I can't explain it to you any more than what I already did. LisaL Oct 2015 #372
That is because, you are making inductive conclusions without enough support to do so LostOne4Ever Oct 2015 #373
It's explained in the OP article as to what this teacher was looking for. LisaL Oct 2015 #374
The article says: LostOne4Ever Oct 2015 #375
Ask yourself these questions: LostOne4Ever Oct 2015 #378
Test had 3 questions, 2 points each. LisaL Oct 2015 #379
Easy, because Problem 3 didn't ask for a method and you can't see the bottom of problem 3 LostOne4Ever Oct 2015 #381
If each question had two parts, then it woud have had two parts. LisaL Oct 2015 #382
I already addressed that. Now about the questions I asked you? nt LostOne4Ever Oct 2015 #383
because the question asks for the application of a specific algorithm for computing Warren Stupidity Oct 2015 #4
But the kid did show 5 + 5 +5 - so he/she was not using memorization nt karynnj Oct 2015 #9
And the algorithm used 3+3+3+3+3 Warren Stupidity Oct 2015 #13
It's still rote memorization. Worse, it's rote memorization of an algorithm... lumberjack_jeff Oct 2015 #27
No - if he had just put the answer, it could be memorization karynnj Oct 2015 #29
Oh, GOD FORFEND that it be the dreaded MEMORIZATION!! WinkyDink Oct 2015 #39
If it doesn't answer the question, it's not the right answer. Donald Ian Rankin Oct 2015 #200
multiplication happens to be commutative but not all algorithms are Warren Stupidity Oct 2015 #213
If they're doing that, it genuinely does strike me as stupid. Donald Ian Rankin Oct 2015 #307
I'd love to make that teacher and her defenders learn to spell that way. "Spell 'CAT." "No, Johnny, WinkyDink Oct 2015 #359
I think you've missed the point. Donald Ian Rankin Oct 2015 #370
I know the exact point, and I think it is unnecessarily Jesuitical. "It's the ORDER." Yeah, yeah. WinkyDink Oct 2015 #403
The kid showed 5 three times (3x5), not 3 five times (5x3). Iggo Oct 2015 #47
It is the same thing. That's really the purpose of teaching this way. Yo_Mama Oct 2015 #456
I guess "repeated addition strategy" is not Commutative MowCowWhoHow III Oct 2015 #5
5x3=3x5. LisaL Oct 2015 #10
simplified, of course (and thats because regular multiplication is commutative) MowCowWhoHow III Oct 2015 #14
Which = STUPID. Are they trying to 'teach" that 3X5 does NOT equal 5X3?? It is CONDESCENDING to ask WinkyDink Oct 2015 #46
"I can use multiplication strategies to help me multiply" MowCowWhoHow III Oct 2015 #49
I could use an abacus, too, but if we are being REAL, NO KID will do this ridiculous step-by-step WinkyDink Oct 2015 #52
They could be conceptually preparing children for non-commutative multiplication MowCowWhoHow III Oct 2015 #53
The point is not to get the correct answer, Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #178
Many generations before this generation have done it either way and still ended up with liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #183
Making sure a child understands the basic mathematical language Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #190
We are teaching our children if you just think this exact way I promise it will be so much easier liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #193
No. We are teaching them a common language. Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #202
Have you given up the language of 'five multiplied by three', then? muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #220
The much more common way is 5 times 3. n/t Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #249
But saying 'multiplied by' still seems valid in the rest of the world muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #260
No one is removing multiplication from the vocabulary. Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #266
The teacher is removing it muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #290
But subtract 7 from 5 would NOT be the correct expression. Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #389
Grammatically, "5 multiplied by 3" is fine; and see the guide for teachers in #316 muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #394
There's nothing wrong with the phrase "multiplied by." Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #448
So, "5 multiplied by 3" means 5+5+5, doesn't it? muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #460
But that's not how multiplication is defined mathematically. In fact, the kid is probably closer to Chathamization Oct 2015 #217
That's different level of reasoning Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #247
But that's the point - the student is mathematically correct, but is marked down because they're not Chathamization Oct 2015 #271
It's not which order the teacher decides to use. Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #391
Counting the groups either way displays a knowledge of the process Gormy Cuss Oct 2015 #322
Have the child defend why their method works. Now that is teaching critical thinking! liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #365
Correct, as to knowledge of the process. Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #385
Somewhere, an algebra teacher is screaming in agony. Yo_Mama Oct 2015 #454
No they are trying to teach order of operations Egnever Oct 2015 #79
What's the concept here? pokerfan Oct 2015 #205
5X3 means five groups of three. 3X5 means three groups of five. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #300
They no longer teach that multiplication is commutative? pokerfan Oct 2015 #355
What are these teachers preparing them for? LisaL Oct 2015 #346
I simply can't be bothered anymore. MowCowWhoHow III Oct 2015 #347
Bad teacher. Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #7
Having taught math for 11 years, Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #180
Then this approach is even more confusing... Adrahil Oct 2015 #214
Not all multiplication is communative. jeff47 Oct 2015 #244
Yeah... no matrix math involved here. No cross products or dot products. Adrahil Oct 2015 #246
Then stop arguing in favor of muddying it. jeff47 Oct 2015 #248
It doesn't ONLY mean that... Adrahil Oct 2015 #251
Yes, it does ONLY mean that. jeff47 Oct 2015 #258
Well said Egnever Oct 2015 #314
No, "five multiplied by three" does not 'literally' mean "add 5 threes together" (nt) muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #262
By all means, keep the real meaning a secret only known to yourself. (nt) jeff47 Oct 2015 #265
'five multiplied by three' means 'add a five to a five, and add a third five' muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #288
No, that's 3x5. jeff47 Oct 2015 #291
No, muriel is correct. 5x3 is closer to meaning 5+5+5 than 3+3+3+3+3 by most definitions of integer Chathamization Oct 2015 #295
The first number is the number of addends, the second is the addend. jeff47 Oct 2015 #296
But that's not true, it's usually defined in the opposite way. Look at how multiplication is defined Chathamization Oct 2015 #297
Yes, it is true. jeff47 Oct 2015 #301
So, that say that, also, "3 x 4 = 3 + 3 + 3 + 3 = 12" muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #309
Yes, because it is wrong for the same reason. jeff47 Oct 2015 #311
So why did you link to it? muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #315
If you read the article, you'd see that they were talking about communative property at that point. jeff47 Oct 2015 #339
I can't see "given that the second number is the addend" in the question muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #344
Eh, did you read the link? The axioms are closer to what the kid wrote than what you are claiming Chathamization Oct 2015 #323
The point is to not have to rip out shortcuts later that do not really help. jeff47 Oct 2015 #340
Again, did you read your link? What the kid put is closer to the axiomatic definition than what you Chathamization Oct 2015 #341
What shortcuts? LisaL Oct 2015 #342
Not at all. Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #264
Because they didn't follow the written directions frazzled Oct 2015 #8
Kid showed his work. He didn't memorize the table. LisaL Oct 2015 #12
It has been my experience that there is no winning this argument. Warren Stupidity Oct 2015 #15
most people read the article, like 11x27 , or 120x21 snooper2 Oct 2015 #18
If the teacher was trying to teach kids to do mental math, the kid was right. lumberjack_jeff Oct 2015 #37
Yes, the child understood the nature of the algorithm and found the simplest application of it Fumesucker Oct 2015 #45
You missed the point, and apparently didn't read the article. Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #181
Or you do it in your head 1939 Oct 2015 #204
Right. In the same way 99*1 means add 1, 99 times. lumberjack_jeff Oct 2015 #30
Exactly. The teacher would rather the kids sat there adding 1, 99 times, then LisaL Oct 2015 #54
You're focusing on the answer. Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #182
Wow! You're talking to a wall... TreasonousBastard Oct 2015 #197
I Think Everybody Sees RobinA Oct 2015 #224
I am not privy to what is going on in that calss except... TreasonousBastard Oct 2015 #226
'more inquiry' like "why did you deduct a point for the correct repeated addition I did?" muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #228
Not in Base Six. ChairmanAgnostic Oct 2015 #223
Yes that is true. Warren Stupidity Oct 2015 #230
The teacher is not thinking of what it means and doing the obvious rote thing. karynnj Oct 2015 #32
No the concept is order of operations not multiplication Egnever Oct 2015 #80
Yeah RobinA Oct 2015 #69
are you seriously defending this BS? Fast Walker 52 Oct 2015 #78
By all means, let's teach conformity rather than, ya know, math. Nt Adrahil Oct 2015 #215
How could Julie afford to buy 7 packages of cupcakes ???????? olddots Oct 2015 #11
I suggest she knock over a liquor store Warpy Oct 2015 #16
Winner! smirkymonkey Oct 2015 #55
Depends on how fast the cupcakes were traveling. Lochloosa Oct 2015 #17
She worked for a 100 hours making $2 per hour. LisaL Oct 2015 #348
Completely idiotic FiveGoodMen Oct 2015 #21
because as a professional Enrique Oct 2015 #22
And that teacher was wrong. Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #25
those things are loosely true Enrique Oct 2015 #35
But it DOESN'T matter, not for the discipline and not in real life. WinkyDink Oct 2015 #43
It absolutely does matter Egnever Oct 2015 #84
IT MATTERS MORE THAN THE ANSWER BEING 15!!!!!!!! MohRokTah Oct 2015 #118
Actually I failed operational calculus years later... Chan790 Oct 2015 #233
and why some of us "still" don't get it Horse with no Name Oct 2015 #428
And this "professional teacher" is wrong about what is important. Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #44
The lesson was order of operations, not multiplication. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #119
Even if that were the true lesson...the teacher is still the one that is wrong. Chan790 Oct 2015 #245
IT may be that to you, but it is incorrect from an operational order standpoint. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #250
For someone who is consistently wrong in proveable ways... Chan790 Oct 2015 #255
And with your lastest stalking insult, good bye. eom MohRokTah Oct 2015 #257
No, it doesn't. Iggo Oct 2015 #51
I think you and the teacher in question would get along very well (nt) Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #57
No it doesn't Egnever Oct 2015 #76
It teaches the student to respect the power structure, and that school isn't intended for him. n/t lumberjack_jeff Oct 2015 #31
I get it. prayin4rain Oct 2015 #294
Teachers are evaluated on a rigid set of standards Ex Lurker Oct 2015 #23
Bingo! I don't blame the teachers. I blame the government for privatizing our public liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #186
Two words romanic Oct 2015 #24
exactly. Common Core. In other words, every child must think the exact same way liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #198
The test says they're looking for specific multiplication strategies, not answers gollygee Oct 2015 #28
To most children, getting an answer marked wrong is negative reinforcement: punishment. pnwmom Oct 2015 #33
Stupid math. B Calm Oct 2015 #34
Is there any wonder why cash registers automatically count and dispense change now? world wide wally Oct 2015 #36
It's weird that they no longer have kids memorize multiplication tables Marrah_G Oct 2015 #111
1.) Because the teacher is a moron; 2.) Because of the order of the equation; 3.) Because math edu- WinkyDink Oct 2015 #38
+1 Gidney N Cloyd Oct 2015 #136
There is a conceptual difference between adding three copies of five and adding five copies of three struggle4progress Oct 2015 #40
You are not speaking of arithmetic but of higher mathematics. WinkyDink Oct 2015 #50
Dunno. It depends on what one wants to teach. The usual hand arithmetic with Arabic numerals struggle4progress Oct 2015 #63
"I'm not sure I'd take off for something like this in third grade, though"-- you think? Fast Walker 52 Oct 2015 #81
I didn't say I wouldn't -- I said I wasn't sure I would struggle4progress Oct 2015 #112
Maybe the teacher took into account the child's answer on question 2? retread Oct 2015 #42
Because the student did not give the answer required by the question. Agnosticsherbet Oct 2015 #56
Q. Solve 5x3 by repetitive addition. A. 5+5+5=15. Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #58
The student gave the wrong answer. Agnosticsherbet Oct 2015 #59
This is a weird and disheartening thread. (nt) Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #60
Ya Got That Right nt RobinA Oct 2015 #71
Agree. n/t lumberjack_jeff Oct 2015 #163
Evidently you have to start with the number on the right hand side. Rex Oct 2015 #67
And any teacher who insists on that is a moron (nt) Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #68
Or is trying to teach order of operations correctly from the start Egnever Oct 2015 #82
Again. Weird. Disheartening. (nt) Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #85
it's wierd that you don't get it and also I would say somewhat disheartening Egnever Oct 2015 #88
Now You're Being Ridiculous ProfessorGAC Oct 2015 #209
What has that got to do with the OP problem? muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #221
Neither weird nor disheartening. It does my heart good to see this taught in third grade. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #92
Mine as well Egnever Oct 2015 #106
It causes discomfort in parents because they were the victims of mathematics through rote. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #110
I agree completely Egnever Oct 2015 #115
Most of the nerds from my era discovered this stuff on their own. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #117
Yes it will. So much unlearning done later on. joshcryer Oct 2015 #159
And those of my age group who were "geeks" figured out how the operations worked because... MohRokTah Oct 2015 #161
I think there's a gap between the parent -> teacher relationship. joshcryer Oct 2015 #162
Far too often the result of the beginnings of math being taught by elementary teachers Ms. Toad Oct 2015 #184
And hey I admit my gut reaction was "WTF?" joshcryer Oct 2015 #187
Why bother to teach order of operations for situations where it makes no difference? eridani Oct 2015 #466
This is taken out of context. It's obviously array multiplication. joshcryer Oct 2015 #165
Ya know, I am suddenly reminded of my old HP calculator uising RPN... TreasonousBastard Oct 2015 #199
RPN certainly required fewer button pushes. eom MohRokTah Oct 2015 #304
5x3 is 33333's or three five times. 3x5 is 555's or five three times. JanMichael Oct 2015 #100
Speaking as the parent of a 7 year old EarlG Oct 2015 #61
Which Is Why RobinA Oct 2015 #72
So they should get full credit for doing the problem wrong? alarimer Oct 2015 #137
Attitudes like yours taught me to hate school and bureaucrats in the 2nd grade. Throd Oct 2015 #138
I Was In This Boat RobinA Oct 2015 #234
So how did so many generations before this one get by one doing it both ways? liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #185
They are not even training people to be worker bees. LisaL Oct 2015 #334
Aren't you assuming that there were only three questions pokerfan Oct 2015 #195
It's not an assumption. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #240
All we know is that there were at least three questions (nt) pokerfan Oct 2015 #351
Math Does Have Rules RobinA Oct 2015 #227
Exactly. A totally made up rule that makes no sense. LisaL Oct 2015 #329
Oh, please. "Credit for the right method" is a farce designed SOLELY to give "partial credit" to the WinkyDink Oct 2015 #361
"the expected answer was 3+3+3+3+3" - that's conformity and rote memorization muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #222
Why do they talk about getting a point off like it is a punishment? Zing Zing Zingbah Oct 2015 #62
Because smart kids who come up with smart strategies to get to the correct answer Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #66
I don't agree with taking to the internet Zing Zing Zingbah Oct 2015 #70
The strategy was incorrect and displayed a misunderstanding of the order of operations. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #97
NEW MATH!!!! As a former .. Whiskeytide Oct 2015 #64
So... RobinA Oct 2015 #73
All I know is what I read. Whiskeytide Oct 2015 #93
Really great point, thanks for sharing Zing Zing Zingbah Oct 2015 #267
Because it's wrong? Egnever Oct 2015 #74
Really, really important to teach that 3 times 5 is different from 5 times 3. Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #83
Really important to teach the correct order of operations. Egnever Oct 2015 #86
Yes, order of operations is SO important in equations with one single operation. (nt) Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #87
So you just don't like when they start teaching it then. Egnever Oct 2015 #90
Nope, the kid got it right and the teacher is a moron (nt) Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #91
No, the kid got the order of operations incorrect and the teacher corrected them. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #95
Order doesn't matters since 5x3=3x5. LisaL Oct 2015 #141
This quiz was not about multiplication and final answers, it was about the order of operations and MohRokTah Oct 2015 #144
Order of operations makes no difference whatsoever in the particular problem the child was supposed LisaL Oct 2015 #147
Order of operations is CRITICAL in understanding how mathematics works. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #151
Apparently it was a quiz on drawing. WinkyDink Oct 2015 #368
EXACTLY!!!! MohRokTah Oct 2015 #94
Were You Ever RobinA Oct 2015 #237
Ye I was. I have an eidatic memory. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #239
teacher is correct. PowerToThePeople Oct 2015 #77
The answer was not marked wrong, 1 of 2 potential points was deducted on that and the next problem. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #89
5x3 = 5+5+5 = 15 (nt) Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #96
Incorrect. You reversed the proper order of operations. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #98
You would fit in very well as a math teacher at that school (nt) Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #99
That's because I understand the quiz was not about multiplication. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #101
And he will fondly look back upon the day he was docked a point for 5x3=5+5+5=15 (nt) Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #102
Correct, because his answer was only half correct (the "15" part, not the operational part). eom MohRokTah Oct 2015 #105
And in the real world, people don't give a shit how he got there. Throd Oct 2015 #132
And in the real world, people who don't give a shit how they get there serve fries and burgers... MohRokTah Oct 2015 #145
How exactly all these people became scientists and engineers before being taught this way? LisaL Oct 2015 #146
They either figured out how operational order functioned in mathematics upon reaching algebra MohRokTah Oct 2015 #149
They unlearned stuff they learned in grade school. joshcryer Oct 2015 #160
I seem to be making a pretty good living in the real world. Throd Oct 2015 #269
Are you a scientist? MohRokTah Oct 2015 #270
No, I am not a scientist. Throd Oct 2015 #272
Based upon what you do,... MohRokTah Oct 2015 #287
If this kid wants a job in STEM and is going to take calculus Goblinmonger Oct 2015 #353
However did we manage before? Throd Oct 2015 #388
Maybe we'll get more kids into STEM. Goblinmonger Oct 2015 #392
Poorly Goblinmonger Oct 2015 #433
Except this isn't what multiplication means. N/T Chathamization Oct 2015 #407
They are clearly teaching more than just multiplication. Goblinmonger Oct 2015 #432
So you teach a third grader something incorrect about multiplication with the aim that years later Chathamization Oct 2015 #435
The question wasn't "What is 5x3?" Goblinmonger Oct 2015 #436
What? A 5x3 matrix is not equal to 3+3+3+3+3, and it doesn't equal 15. If you wrote Chathamization Oct 2015 #438
The answer to the question asked is: Goblinmonger Oct 2015 #439
Yes, it's about arbitrary strategies that are being taught and not about math. If you want to test Chathamization Oct 2015 #441
4 out 6 on a quiz would be a D oberliner Oct 2015 #191
Exactly. Something like this should be where they mark it right, but leave a note of "By the way..." Zynx Oct 2015 #261
Either way is correct. LisaL Oct 2015 #330
raise your hand if you've ever drawn an array to model basic multiplication... Takket Oct 2015 #104
I have no idea what that even means Marrah_G Oct 2015 #113
I used to do it for fun. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #121
Not me. LisaL Oct 2015 #167
And we wonder why children get frustrated and fall through the cracks. Marrah_G Oct 2015 #109
You could not be more wrong. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #116
I disagree Marrah_G Oct 2015 #120
This is the very basis of operational calculus. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #123
Have a nice night Moh :) Marrah_G Oct 2015 #124
Good to see I'm not the only one who thinks Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #125
the shortcuts are fine ibegurpard Oct 2015 #174
I can't help but wonder how we managed to get somewhere in science without having to learn this way. LisaL Oct 2015 #140
Honestly? We didn't. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #142
We don't need twice as many scientists. LisaL Oct 2015 #148
I agree, twice as many are nowhere near enough. We need to turn out about ten times as many as we MohRokTah Oct 2015 #150
Oh, Come On RobinA Oct 2015 #241
The kid in the article didn't, as is true of at least half of the people posting in this thread. eom MohRokTah Oct 2015 #242
As a broader policy question, what exactly would we do with five times as many scientists? Zynx Oct 2015 #263
There is not much for them to do here either. LisaL Oct 2015 #336
They don't want thinkers. They want workers, workers that do what they are told liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #179
Because they didn't follow instructions? jazzimov Oct 2015 #126
5x3 = 5+5+5 = 15. The horror (nt) Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #131
Half right. You failed to properly apply the repeated addition strategy. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #153
If you get the answer right, I don't care how you got there. Throd Oct 2015 #127
They failed to get the answer right because they failed to properly apply the repeated addition... MohRokTah Oct 2015 #154
Kid propertly applied the repeated addition, got the correct answer, and used an easier way to solve LisaL Oct 2015 #338
the point of this question ibegurpard Oct 2015 #171
LOOK AT QUESTION 3!!! GummyBearz Oct 2015 #133
Question 3 was a combination of an array and operational order. MohRokTah Oct 2015 #156
You will also notice GummyBearz Oct 2015 #166
yeah..I like it, you're testing for those that read the article versus those that react viscerally Demonaut Oct 2015 #143
I read the article. I still think it's bullshit. liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #188
Same here.... Adrahil Oct 2015 #216
I get why. It's five threes not three fives. bravenak Oct 2015 #152
Welcome back, bravenak! nt tblue37 Oct 2015 #169
Thank you! bravenak Oct 2015 #170
This shit just confuses a young kid. U4ikLefty Oct 2015 #157
I tend to agree Skittles Oct 2015 #172
They're teaching array multiplication. Row/object. joshcryer Oct 2015 #164
Hich is still bullshit... Adrahil Oct 2015 #218
No it can't Goblinmonger Oct 2015 #395
part of math ibegurpard Oct 2015 #173
#2 is correct. Array of 4 columns of 6. Why wrong? madfloridian Oct 2015 #175
Same thing as in question one (according to the new math instructions). LisaL Oct 2015 #386
I taught new math the first time they threw it at the kids. madfloridian Oct 2015 #387
Yes, luckily these ideas come and go. I can't wait til it goes. liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #445
Will future generations of engineers have the creativity to solve problems if they are liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #189
Isn't think teaching them three different ways? Renew Deal Oct 2015 #278
What madfloridian said caraher Oct 2015 #192
Just be happy the question pokerfan Oct 2015 #196
It's true that it can be convention. joshcryer Oct 2015 #206
I learned how to roll a joint with one hand in art school olddots Oct 2015 #201
Because the teacher doesn’t understand math Kuroneko Oct 2015 #203
Yeah, some of the claims here are bizarre. Chathamization Oct 2015 #276
But there's an incongruity with the scientific discovery process here. BadgerKid Oct 2015 #207
Theoretical physicist here. I have my doubts that this is a good way to teach math. redgreenandblue Oct 2015 #229
Well, Give That RobinA Oct 2015 #243
Exactly. When a bright kid clearly grasps the commutativity of multiplication, and shrewdly uses it Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #254
I agree Marrah_G Oct 2015 #259
It's not a good way to teach math. LisaL Oct 2015 #331
Thank you for that well thought response. I had a math professor who jokingly told us one time that liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #376
Algorithms are typically guaranteed to work for every case of a certain class of problems. redgreenandblue Oct 2015 #459
Stuff like this is what turns kids off from math n2doc Oct 2015 #231
The kid didn't solve it the way the teacher wanted it to be solved. Deadshot Oct 2015 #232
I've never liked the Martinet School of Teaching Methods. "Put your NAME here, the TITLE there." WinkyDink Oct 2015 #253
Yes, he solved it in easier way and correctly. LisaL Oct 2015 #333
It's not about being right. Deadshot Oct 2015 #447
1. What was the objective? LWolf Oct 2015 #235
^^^ This. Iggo Oct 2015 #283
It is the objective that we take issue with. liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #369
You take issue LWolf Oct 2015 #443
I object to children not being allowed to use different methods and being told they can only liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #446
I didn't think I could hate math any more than I already do. a la izquierda Oct 2015 #238
I took math including Calculus. Still have no affinity for cold numbers, and prefer poetry. Sue me. WinkyDink Oct 2015 #252
High school English teacher. Give me some Whitman. Goblinmonger Oct 2015 #397
"Friday Night Lights": It's not just for Texas anymore. WinkyDink Oct 2015 #402
Many of the responses in this thread illustrate why the clock kid got into trouble. Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #256
The important thing is that we must never question Common Core Orrex Oct 2015 #268
Do you have any actual evidence this was related to Common Core? Recursion Oct 2015 #274
My kids have had do exactly that kind of bullshit math Orrex Oct 2015 #280
And, again, the relation to Common Core is? Recursion Oct 2015 #282
Well, that's a straight up lie. Orrex Oct 2015 #286
This message was self-deleted by its author Recursion Oct 2015 #289
Let me try to be nicer: no, you're wrong Recursion Oct 2015 #292
Really? Orrex Oct 2015 #298
Yep. Now read those links Recursion Oct 2015 #299
Sure. Let's see links to all the times you've called them a scam. Orrex Oct 2015 #310
So, just to be clear, you are confident that you know better than a professional teacher? Recursion Oct 2015 #273
In every school there are great teachers, average teachers and awful teachers. Nye Bevan Oct 2015 #284
In addition Orrex Oct 2015 #337
We also have no idea what method the teacher did or didn't teach Recursion Oct 2015 #458
This is a professional, stupid teacher. This is appalling. n/t Yo_Mama Oct 2015 #457
I recall a story sarisataka Oct 2015 #277
I'm 64 and still remember getting an "F" on a 4th grade math test. mnhtnbb Oct 2015 #279
I was one of those kids too Marrah_G Oct 2015 #377
Well I had mostly As. But then I was never taught this way. LisaL Oct 2015 #437
Very simple. A math-teacher who doesn't know math? Fire him. DetlefK Oct 2015 #281
What? No no no. Recursion Oct 2015 #303
The teacher is punishing the kid for failing to conform to the stupid convention. backscatter712 Oct 2015 #293
"punishing" Blue_Adept Oct 2015 #313
I've read this thread several times today Blue_Adept Oct 2015 #312
Let me show you a rule in mathematics muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #316
I've seen your other posts in the thread Blue_Adept Oct 2015 #317
'It'? What's 'it'? The only singular noun you used before 'it' was 'thread' muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #318
Basically Blue_Adept Oct 2015 #319
What was that you said about 'the "my special snowflake" mentality'? muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #320
If you are preparing them for advanced algebra Goblinmonger Oct 2015 #398
Do you use the phrase 'multiplied by'? Do you feel it hinders advanced algebra and calculus? muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #423
English teacher with two years in civil engineering education. Goblinmonger Oct 2015 #434
The first question is about the repeated addition strategy muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #440
Why don't you just read the manual? LisaL Oct 2015 #327
Thanks. This guide was issued in 2001. So apparently back then LisaL Oct 2015 #325
Also look on page 4 of the manual. LisaL Oct 2015 #328
If you want to solve the problem of 5x3 by repetative addition, LisaL Oct 2015 #326
One of the basic fundamental rules of math is that LisaL Oct 2015 #332
What you are reading, to be precise, are posts by those of us who did JUST FINE in the 50's/60's. WinkyDink Oct 2015 #367
So math is not about giving them the option of a career based on math Goblinmonger Oct 2015 #399
It appears we have a lot of anti-math people here PowerToThePeople Oct 2015 #465
Oh, yes! "Non-intellectuals" = "Non-math people," idiots like philosophers, Pulitzer winners, etc. WinkyDink Oct 2015 #471
You are unable to say "five multiplied by three" is a way to say '5x3' muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #475
That's funny I was thinking your posts calling children "special snowflakes" sounded an awful liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #482
I don't know how I feel about this. Xyzse Oct 2015 #324
Problem with shortcuts is BadgerKid Oct 2015 #349
That's precisely the point. Xyzse Oct 2015 #362
I would have answered same way as the kid. MadrasT Oct 2015 #357
Even in 3rd grade, were that I, I'd have laughed in the teacher's face. Might have said "PO-TAH-TO." WinkyDink Oct 2015 #364
This thread will go down as "The great Math Wars" BlueJazz Oct 2015 #380
It's more than math wars. It is the war between those who see Race to the Top and liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #383
I'm not sure you wrote those points in the correct order. ;-) WinkyDink Oct 2015 #404
1.The teacher did not punish. 2.The child answered incorrectly. 3.The child earned that grade. Glassunion Oct 2015 #390
My husband and I were talking about this thread at dinner tonight. mnhtnbb Oct 2015 #396
It does if you are preparing for calculus Goblinmonger Oct 2015 #400
In 3rd grade? Really? Turn off a kid to math at this age and there will be no need mnhtnbb Oct 2015 #401
The kid lost two points on a homework assignment. Goblinmonger Oct 2015 #430
Well, clearly some math teachers somewhere in the world know what they are doing mnhtnbb Oct 2015 #464
Whoa! Preparing for Keanu Reeves? Cool! WinkyDink Oct 2015 #406
Clever. Goblinmonger Oct 2015 #431
This message was self-deleted by its author Orrex Oct 2015 #483
But THAT, mon ami, is THE CRUX: Some argue the METHOD counts most; some, the correct answer. WinkyDink Oct 2015 #405
Yes, math is based on rules of math (directions) PowerToThePeople Oct 2015 #408
I'd say that using a particular method can be pretty important, but this thread shows the serious Chathamization Oct 2015 #409
five times three is 3+3+3+3+3 PowerToThePeople Oct 2015 #410
But that's not true. See reply 323. If the people who have taken graduate level math courses are Chathamization Oct 2015 #412
they are NOT learning commutative property in 3rd grade PowerToThePeople Oct 2015 #415
Well, like I said, even if you want to ignore the commutative property the kids answer is closer to Chathamization Oct 2015 #418
well PowerToThePeople Oct 2015 #421
They're wrong based upon axiomatic definitions of multiplication that can be found in, for example, Chathamization Oct 2015 #425
How would you write 'five multiplied by three'? (nt) muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #414
that was not the question asked. PowerToThePeople Oct 2015 #416
I think it was. Did you think the question asked was 'three multiplied by five'? (nt) muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #417
the question was "5x3=" (n/t) PowerToThePeople Oct 2015 #419
You say that is not 'five multiplied by three'. I (and the guide in #316) say it is. muriel_volestrangler Oct 2015 #420
Please tell me you are not serious. 5x3 cannot be interpreted as 5 multiplied by 3? liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #444
I work in a highly technical field. Aerows Oct 2015 #424
Practical application MATTERS. PowerToThePeople Oct 2015 #426
I can only speak for myself Aerows Oct 2015 #429
One of the problems with teaching that only way is correct is that people learn, see, and liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #442
Theory's important too, but apparently a lot of the people pushing it don't understand it Chathamization Oct 2015 #427
The child understands the material better than the teacher!!!! Yo_Mama Oct 2015 #449
Wow, some textbook authoritarianism in this thread. redgreenandblue Oct 2015 #467
Yes, there seems to be a very loud faction here on DU who can't help but tell people liberal_at_heart Oct 2015 #481
I'd say quibbling over a point because a teacher can, exemplifies a person in a position that should lonestarnot Oct 2015 #468
Hey helicopter parent, your little snowflake got it wrong. PowerToThePeople Oct 2015 #469
Even if the concession is made that the child didn't follow instructions but went instead for the WinkyDink Oct 2015 #470
That answer isn't just bizarre to a third grader, but to anyone with a decent grasp of math Chathamization Oct 2015 #473
There is no concession to do as the student answer is correct. Kuroneko Oct 2015 #476
You seem not to know the phrase "Even if....." WinkyDink Oct 2015 #484
Here's a fun reductio ad absurdim way to think of it: Orrex Oct 2015 #472
That is absurdim PowerToThePeople Oct 2015 #474
You find math to be humiliating? That's bizarre. Orrex Oct 2015 #480
I'll suppose in thirty years we'll find out whether or not this is all bullshit. Throd Oct 2015 #477
A math question for all in this thread. PowerToThePeople Oct 2015 #478
Where's Tom Lehrer when we need him? nt Buns_of_Fire Oct 2015 #479
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