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The Act of Learning Math

By: Etan Savir

What is learning math all about? What's the basic idea we need to help our children be successful in math? What's the secret to math ability?

In the United States, most people, most teachers, most students, believe that learning math is about developing understanding of certain concepts of principles.

There is a pervasive belief that a certain type of innate math ability, the much desired trait of "Being Good at Learning Math," is the key to success. And the lack of it is the cause of frustration and failure in this subject.

But nothing could be farther from the truth.

Just Like Riding a Bike
Think of teaching a child to ride a bike. What are the conditions for success? There are three.

First, the child needs to have already mastered a set of motor skills that are prerequisite to riding the bike. He or she needs to be able to walk and run already, so that the strength and endurance to turn the peddles are in place. He or she needs the gross motor coordination to hold the handles tight, peddle, and turn the head a bit, all at the same time. He or she needs enough sense of balance so that the potential to stay up is there. So, we need prerequisite skills.

Second, we need developmental readiness. There's a point in maturity when the child is ready and able to put it together to make the step of taking off the training wheels.

Third, we need some kind of technique to help the child to get going. An approach that will make it relatively easy to get started. A system that will make failure less likely. Like taking the child to an open level place without cars. Like running along holding the back of the bike, gradually letting go for longer and longer. Like keeping up the words of encouragement.

What about the screaming, the tears, the spending weeks or months over it? Probably the child simply wasn't ready for it. It's like picking cherries: when they're ready, they come right off in your hand. If you have to pull hard, it's because they're not ready yet.

But What About Natural Math Ability?
What about natural ability? OK, a very coordinated child might learn very young. Might teach himself. Who knows? Think you can look at a bunch of ten year olds, twenty year olds, thirty year olds ... and tell who learnt to ride at four or five or six?

I doubt it.

With unusual talent, the child can learn faster, easier, a bit younger. But none of this is likely to matter much in the long run.

With the developed skills in place and an OK teaching technique, really almost anyone can learn to ride.

What About Mastering Concepts?
What about the concepts? You think the child understand how the bike works? I only do in a vague way myself? I'm sure I don't understand why it's easier to balance when you're going faster than when you're going slower. You really don't need to understand "the why and the how" to be able to do it.

Natural ability makes it easier, but isn't the main thing. Conceptual understanding isn't the main thing. The main thing is sound prerequisite skills, developmental readiness, and some sensible approaches to instruction.

Now here's the scary part. Most math students in our schools are hitting the material without the necessary prerequisite skills, without developmental readiness, and without satisfactory approaches to education. This is pattern of math education is what is really behind the current "math anxiety" crisis in American schools.

"So many parents just don't know what their children should learn in math. Once they have that figured out, helping their child achieve math education success is much easier."

About the Author: Etan Savir is a 15-year math educator, math curriculum consultant, math textbook contributor, and currently the math department chairman at a K-12 college prep school in suburban Baltimore, Maryland.

You are invited to visit his web site devoted to helping parents understand the fundamental math skills their children should master in each grade and math course: www.sensible-math-education.com

Article source: www.ezinearticles.com

Article Compilation by www.HomeworkSuccessArticleDirectory.com

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