Posted on 06/17/2018 6:25:25 PM PDT by BobL
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Eight years after California adopted new standards designed to boost students critical thinking and analytical skills, its become clear that a critical group was left behind in the push to implement Common Core: parents.
The good old days of memorizing math formulas or multiplication tables are gone. Instead, Common Core math requires students to show how they reason their way to the right answer. As a result, many parents say homework is far more complicated than it used to be. For example, the right answer to 3×5 isnt just 15 anymore, as one popular social media post noted. Its 3+3+3+3+3. And its 5+5+5. The new methods leave many parents baffled.
I despise common core math, says Katie ODonnell, a pediatric respiratory therapist who lives in San Jose and often uses math at work. Though she loves volunteering in her son Nimas class, she admits she sometimes ducks out early because shes embarrassed that she has no explanations for students who ask for help.
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(Excerpt) Read more at mercurynews.com ...
“I guess they think that boys work harder when frustrated, but they are dead wrong on that one; they tune out.”
We still have to get into their minds...and why would they ever give a crap about boys, when you have a college rape epidemic, glass ceiling, and 72 cents on the dollar for women?
They’re not wrong, it’s WORKING PERFECTLY, to punish the people they hate...men.
Common core has two (unintended?) outcomes. when parents tell the kids the correct and straightforward way to answer a question the kid will say thats not how they did it in class! If I dont draw a picture and count them all manually Ill get a it marked wrong. In this way they are taught a) their parents arent to be listened to and b) the government isnt to be questioned.
That is the only explanation that makes sense to me, especially the way it was implemented. The homework sheets I have seen don't even have a problem done for example like all those in the past did.
I was determined to help my 2nd grade grand child with her math homework. She had no idea what she was supposed to do because they skip around so much. There was no example problem on any of her homework pages. I am not one to give up easily so I googled 2nd grade math images until I found one similar to what she was assigned. Once I knew the terminology for that assignment I went to you-tube and found a video with an instructor doing it step by step.
My grand daughter is sharp and she understood the lesson and did her homework, she got 100%. Her teacher asked her who helped her and she told her teacher what I did. I thought the whole thing was bizarre, it seemed as though she was not meant to understand it. I could not make sense of it until I read your post.
I read a white paper on CC earlier in the school year that explained their reasoning for CC math. The claim was that people who learn memorization (without visualization) have a harder time with higher math. (Here I agree to a point with the concept of teaching visualization. At some point, you need to be able to visualize the problem.)
OK, here is the kicker. Years ago in college (engineering) I noticed that after the second year most of the women had dropped out. The paper claimed that boys learn better by memorization and girls learn better by visualization and by stressing the visual they are making it easier for the girls at the expense of the boys. And that is why dad still teaches memorization.
See, your comment is not that far off base. Just wish I could find the paper.
“That is the only explanation that makes sense to me, especially the way it was implemented.”
While we don’t like to think of our friendly teachers, administrators, and textbook publishers as enemy combatants, if one looks at it from the other direction, it gets easier to understand.
Basically, the Left has politicized EVERYTHING they get their hands on, with the FBI and NFL simply being two of the more recent examples. So we give them our kids for 1000 hours a year - what would be UNBELIEVABLE would be if they didn’t throw their politics into the mix...which obviously is not the case. They have our kids - of course they will use them for their political objectives.
Once we’re at the point of understanding that we’re dealing with political operatives running the schools and especially setting the agenda, it then becomes possible to fight them on that level. But, sadly, we’re nowhere near that yet.
I have played this for my kids (along with the Elements song) and I have mentioned it to some of my kids’ teachers. They are in their 20s or early 30s, and have no clue that we already went through the “new math” back when I was in elementary school in the mid 60s.
Ill sometimes do multiplication the common core way in my head to get a close answer if not the right answer. If I need the right answer I do it the right way.
But the common core way is not the way to teach it.
Look at the addition side of your diagram. The common core way still requires you to carry the 1 in the equation 23 + 7 = 30. If a kid understands carrying digits to the next higher column/factor, then the common core way is not helpful. The kid can just do it the right way and get to the correct answer faster and more easily.
Satan thrives via sowing chaos and confusion.
Education is one of Satan’s Four Hidden Dynasties.
Draw your own conclusions.
Yep. Common core is designed for parents to NOT be able to help their children learn. It’s a part of destroying the family unit. Making our next generations of Americans into citizens of the world.
Common Core math is easy. Its easy for my children. Its easy for me. I had trouble understanding why some concepts were being taught in first grade Common Core math. Few of the children I watched could figure it out at first. I think CC math makes some students frustrated due to advanced concepts being taught too early.
OK. So my phone number is 646-969-3230. What are my gozintas?
Practical math is a mix of rote and understanding.
Or, even better, a triangle with sides of 5-12-13.
Every word you said correct. Amazing anybody doesn’t understand you main principle.
Doesn’t 2+2=5 in an Orwellian world?
When my kids were younger, I was exhausted every night by having to re-teach them their homework. Stuff we did as 2nd graders ... 4th graders were still struggling with. And this is a “good” school system.
Anything that involved repetition and reciting their work got the ax. So, you didn’t have the whole class reciting the times table in that sleepy bee-hive voice. Maybe recitation was hokey but it was another tool in the tool-box. Why throw them all out.
“Practical math is a mix of rote and understanding.”
True, but much tougher to develop the understanding when you don’t have the rote nailed down.
I remember first teaching my oldest kid arithmetic (long before he was old enough for the schools to start on him). I figured that if I showed him 2 apples and then 3 apples, he’d say there were 5 altogether. Pretty obvious to us, and the visuals would help with the understanding.
Forget it, even though he could count, he was clueless, simply guessing at the answer, and nearly always wrong. So I said screw it with the ‘understanding’ part, we’ll go straight to memorization, once he knows the answer, he’ll start to understand it. That worked great, even though it seemed counter-intuitive at the some.
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