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Common Core Math Problem: How to Subtract 293 from 568 in Just 10 Steps! (With Picture)
Pundit Press ^ | 10/6/14 | Aurelius

Posted on 10/06/2014 1:47:52 PM PDT by therightliveswithus

Imagine a teacher asks you to solve this question: 568-293. Depending on your age you might do one of three things...

...Third, you might use the new common core was to subtract, which is much simpler, with only... 10 steps.

First, you would take the 200 out of the 293, and save the 93 for later. Then you would take 568 and subtract 200 from it. Then you'd take the remaining 368 and you would subtract 60 from it, because you are taught that, for some reason, you cannot simply subtract 90 from 368. 368-60 equals 308. Then you subtract 30 from 308 because, again, for some reason 368-90 doesn't exist. 308-30 equals 278. Then you take the three that is left over from 293-290, because you already subtracted 200, 60, and 30 from 293 to get three, and you minus that 3 from the remaining 278 that you got from subtracting 290 from 568. Still following? Good, because one you minus 3 from 278, you get the answer of 275! Then, you double check your answer by adding up 200 + 60 + 30 + 3 to get 293, which is the number you subtracted from 568. Much, much more complicated than the other two methods and an over-complification of a simple problem. More than that, the way to figure out this problem is literally more than the other two methods combined.

This is an actual common core problem which, hilariously, tries to tell students its a mere three steps: Common Core Math

(Excerpt) Read more at thepunditpress.com ...


TOPICS: Education; Politics
KEYWORDS: commoncore; education; math; teaching
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To: surrey

I don’t get why teaching long addition or long subtraction is suddenly some kind of antiquated way of solving problems like this... it still requires thinking and it takes less time!


21 posted on 10/06/2014 2:03:08 PM PDT by bryan999
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To: neocon1984

Do you have any sources for that? I would just LOOOOVVVE to keep that handy information in reserve for some special relatives of mine. :-]

(Because educators are the smartest people in their little world.)


22 posted on 10/06/2014 2:03:46 PM PDT by CommieCutter (The only thing the smart phone really accomplished was bringing the dumb people to the internet.)
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To: Da Coyote

I even tried again as an adult, but got completely lost when it got to sines. Fortunately 99% of people never actually need to know algebra in their adult lives.


23 posted on 10/06/2014 2:05:03 PM PDT by Hugin ("Do yourself a favor--first thing, get a firearm!",)
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To: dsc
It’s not working. The math test score is trending steeply downward. I’ll be stepping in.

My Wife, a Reading Specialist for the City of Anaheim Elementary school district here in California, states the following:

1. Common Core is universally despised by ALL of the teachers.
2. All references to the founding of our country have been removed and replaced with the grievances experienced by various "minorities"
3. The amount of busy work, or the load put on their shoulders has increased to the point of breaking almost all of the teachers, especially those that care about doing a good job.
4. She, and the other teachers, give it no more than 3 years before it fails like all of the other fad education crap that has been foisted on Education here in the US.
24 posted on 10/06/2014 2:06:07 PM PDT by SoConPubbie (Mitt and Obama: They're the same poison, just a different potency)
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To: therightliveswithus

How is it considered “common” when no one anywhere has ever done it this way? If I had been paid by the hour for all of the tables of rote math I performed in grade school, year after year I would be rich. We did tables until I could recite any calculation of addition, subtraction, multiplication or division in seconds - and for years ever after you could wake me from a sound slumber and ask me any basic math question and I’d blurt out the answer - still within seconds. The function of doing math at the basic level is not important enough to do it using this kind of method. The value of rote memorization is that you retrieve the answer from the old memory bank. The value of muddled cross-skipping is? What? Anybody know?


25 posted on 10/06/2014 2:06:31 PM PDT by februus
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To: Steely Tom

That’s a trick we learned in 3rd grade or so...


26 posted on 10/06/2014 2:06:34 PM PDT by mikrofon (Monday BUMP)
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To: dsc
My 4th grader’s teacher is hyped up on some kind of new math.

My 4th grader’s teacher is hyped up on some kind of new math meth.

27 posted on 10/06/2014 2:07:57 PM PDT by Flick Lives ("I can't believe it's not Fascism!")
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To: SoConPubbie; dsc

one more thing...

She has been told by those managing the Common Core process in her district that it will probably take somewhere around 13 years of failure before you start seeing success with type of program.

Your kids are screwed if you are relying on the Public School system to adequately educate your children.


28 posted on 10/06/2014 2:09:12 PM PDT by SoConPubbie (Mitt and Obama: They're the same poison, just a different potency)
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To: therightliveswithus

I think Common Core is intended to isolate the children, make them children of the “state” by convincing them that their parents don’t know anything (Common Core) but the teachers at school know everything. Parents can’t help kids with their homework but the school can. I think it’s a means to train the children to look outside the home for knowledge.


29 posted on 10/06/2014 2:10:55 PM PDT by ransomnote
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To: therightliveswithus

I’ve learned more about reading, writing, and arithmetic from the homeschooling curriculums we use than I did in thirteen years of public school! My kids will NEVER be exposed to the same nonsense I had to deal with.

I’ll also give credit where credit is due and note that just reading Free Republic for the past five years has improved my spelling, my writing, my reading comprehension, my vocabulary, and my ability to see through media BS!


30 posted on 10/06/2014 2:11:29 PM PDT by MeganC (It took Democrats four hours to deport Elian Gonzalez)
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To: therightliveswithus

Slow down folks. I haven’t even put the numbers on paper yet.
Let’s see now. Was it 593 or 275? Geez, I’m confused.


31 posted on 10/06/2014 2:11:42 PM PDT by Joan Kerrey (The larger the government, the smaller the people)
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To: therightliveswithus

I was helping my son with his Common Core math homework the other day. The topic was mean (average), median (middle element in a set) and mode (the most frequently occurring element in a set).

The last question read something on the lines of “The term (mean, median, mode) best describes the following: 1,1,3,5,7,7,12.”

I sent the teacher a note saying the question was absolute gibberish. None of those terms can describe a set. They each can describe a particular property of the set (i.e., the mean would be approx. 5.1, the median would be 5, and the modes would be 1 and 7), but the terms cannot describe the set.

The teacher agreed with me, and just gave all students a correct answer on the question regardless of what answer they gave.


32 posted on 10/06/2014 2:14:26 PM PDT by CA Conservative (Texan by birth, Californian by circumstance)
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To: therightliveswithus

High schools in China do not allow the use of electronic calculators. All calculations are performed by hand. I found this out when a chinese college mate quickly found the square root of a number by hand. Intrigued, I asked, and got the explanation above.


33 posted on 10/06/2014 2:27:36 PM PDT by SpaceBar
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To: toast

It is worse than that. I teach 5th grade Math. They don’t want us to call it “borrowing” any more. The correct term now is “regrouping.” I actually had a negative comment on an evaluation once because I said “borrow” instead of “regroup.” As far as how I actually teach how to solve the referenced problem, I only teach the so called “long subtraction” method.


34 posted on 10/06/2014 2:35:45 PM PDT by gop4lyf (Claire Wolfe called. She said the Awkward Phase is over.)
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To: neocon1984
Guess which college majors have the lowest SAT and ACT scores. Yup. It’s the ones that wind up teaching our kids.

As this example illustrates, it is not the teacher who is the problem. It is the educational elite who come up with this crap and then dictate that teachers use it.

35 posted on 10/06/2014 2:36:57 PM PDT by CMAC51
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To: ransomnote

Good point, I would add whether it is intended to do that or not, that is what it is doing.

Isolating parents from children.


36 posted on 10/06/2014 2:38:51 PM PDT by Mr. Peabody
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To: SoConPubbie

“Your kids are screwed if you are relying on the Public School system to adequately educate your children.”

My kids are screwed because my health prevents me from doing more than supplementing—or contradicting—what they get at school.

I tried to homeschool, but I was not able to do it.


37 posted on 10/06/2014 2:38:52 PM PDT by dsc (Any attempt to move a government to the left is a crime against humanity.)
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To: februus

Whatever method is used, has to give the student the ability to look at an arithmetic problem and know right and wrong...if they are doing calculation on a machine. Machines can replace our drudge work calculations, after they have become drudge work, not before.

My parents would not allow any of us children to go in the water on an inner tube before we were competent swimmers. Relying on calculators or computers, is the same just different context of getting out of your depth.

DK


38 posted on 10/06/2014 2:41:33 PM PDT by Dark Knight
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To: toast

Step 2 is just “borrowing” in disguise, but the justifications are very confusing - to me at least! “Subtract the 6 tens that are there.” ... where? ... Oh, in the minuend. So then they subract 6 tens also from the subtrahend, then subtract the “remaining” 3 tens from the reduced minuend of 308, but how do you do that? There are no tens left! I guess it’s supposed to be easy to subtract 3 tens from 30 tens, but this is a shift in terminology, and a deeply buried and unexplained version of “borrowing”.


39 posted on 10/06/2014 2:41:43 PM PDT by dr_lew
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To: Resolute Conservative

Can you count by 2s? Is it as easy as 1-2-3? Do you like your 9 to 5 job at the 7/11?

Consider these dates in 2015 and into 2016.

2/last, 3/21, 4/4, 5/9, 6/6, 7/11, 8/8, 9/5, 10/10, 11/7, 12/12 and 1/23 (the following year)

The dates above will all fall on a Saturday. The same series for 2016 into 2017 will fall on a Monday

Leap year complicates things so we have to start with February last, either the 28th or the 29th, but if you verify one of those dates and can remember the series, you can always figure out what day of the week any day in the year falls on.


40 posted on 10/06/2014 2:46:14 PM PDT by muir_redwoods ("He is a very shallow critic who cannot see an eternal rebel in the heart of a conservative." G.K .C)
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