Posted February 10, 2016
yogsloth: My 6 and 8-year-olds are deep into the Common Core. I've been watching it unfold.
It's fascinating.
We know several families that have pulled their children out of school entirely rather than deal with it.
So, I've dived in to trying to understand it myself. I was prepared to hate it. Prepared to believe it was a dumbing-down designed to alleviate the suffering of the stupid at the expense of the capable. And what I've discovered is the opposite.
As much as it is a lot harder work to do problems this way, what it's doing is teaching children how to think about math, rather that just beating them up with memorization. Those of us who are capable of doing a certain amount of arithmetic in our heads use these methods anyway. You know who's pissed off? People whose understanding of math extends only as far as picking up a calculator.
It's much, much more work to do it the Common Core way. But it's providing a framework to teach kids a way to approach mathematics in real-world situations where they won't simply shrug and type it into their phone to find the answer.
I don't know what their math will look like in later grades, but so far through grade 3, I'm on board.
Some things just need memorization though. Just look at the alphabet and multiplication tables. And the division by multiple subtraction just seems like giving an alternative cumbersome method as the ''default'' one to use. Not to mention it doesn't help in getting decimal values. I'd be interested to know what is and isn't cut out of history and other subjects though. In my case, I haven't found mention of the Crusades or the Rationalistic Movement of the 19th century anywhere in local textbooks for schoolkids.It's fascinating.
We know several families that have pulled their children out of school entirely rather than deal with it.
So, I've dived in to trying to understand it myself. I was prepared to hate it. Prepared to believe it was a dumbing-down designed to alleviate the suffering of the stupid at the expense of the capable. And what I've discovered is the opposite.
As much as it is a lot harder work to do problems this way, what it's doing is teaching children how to think about math, rather that just beating them up with memorization. Those of us who are capable of doing a certain amount of arithmetic in our heads use these methods anyway. You know who's pissed off? People whose understanding of math extends only as far as picking up a calculator.
It's much, much more work to do it the Common Core way. But it's providing a framework to teach kids a way to approach mathematics in real-world situations where they won't simply shrug and type it into their phone to find the answer.
I don't know what their math will look like in later grades, but so far through grade 3, I'm on board.
Post edited February 10, 2016 by Shadowstalker16