Quoting schmod from 00:04, 13th May 2008
Earlier today, my parents called me asking for help with my 8-year-old sister's maths homework.
This is it:
http://www.mrnale.com/homelink_10.3.pdf
Does this seem like a logical or reasonable approach to Mathematics?
I have no idea how one would ever possibly be able to actually extend this sort of thought all the way through to University-level mathematics.
Their method of long division is even more terrifying:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eKld7lQHKRg
Quoting schmod from 00:04, 13th May 2008
Earlier today, my parents called me asking for help with my 8-year-old sister's maths homework.
This is it:
http://www.mrnale.com/homelink_10.3.pdf
Does this seem like a logical or reasonable approach to Mathematics?
I have no idea how one would ever possibly be able to actually extend this sort of thought all the way through to University-level mathematics.
Their method of long division is even more terrifying:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eKld7lQHKRg
Quoting Mehmsy from 01:43, 13th May 2008
What happened to the good old days of teaching abstract concepts without contrived concrete examples?
Quoting mhuzzell from 01:03, 16th May 2008
His sister is eight. I'm not sure it's even possible to teach this stuff to an (average) 8-year-old without using concrete examples. From all I've heard about educational theory (which is a hell of a lot more than I ever cared to), children usually only even begin to develop abstract reasoning around age 10 or 11, and it's not fully developed for years after that.
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