Geek humor
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wrote on 22 Apr 2022, 16:45 last edited by
Horace - that was true in your day. Common core math and the Singapore method it’s based on really does a good job with creating deeper understanding. That’s why parents complain so much about it.
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Horace - that was true in your day. Common core math and the Singapore method it’s based on really does a good job with creating deeper understanding. That’s why parents complain so much about it.
wrote on 22 Apr 2022, 17:18 last edited by -
wrote on 22 Apr 2022, 18:03 last edited by
The utility of the rote mechanics was that anybody could memorize them, and then everybody "knew math". I wonder if you run up against intellectual ability barriers in attempts to teach the ideas.
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The utility of the rote mechanics was that anybody could memorize them, and then everybody "knew math". I wonder if you run up against intellectual ability barriers in attempts to teach the ideas.
wrote on 22 Apr 2022, 18:17 last edited by@Horace said in Geek humor:
The utility of the rote mechanics was that anybody could memorize them, and then everybody "knew math".
I once taught a set-7 math class. Forget long-division, half of them could barely use a ruler.
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The utility of the rote mechanics was that anybody could memorize them, and then everybody "knew math". I wonder if you run up against intellectual ability barriers in attempts to teach the ideas.
wrote on 22 Apr 2022, 18:26 last edited by@Horace said in Geek humor:
The utility of the rote mechanics was that anybody could memorize them, and then everybody "knew math". I wonder if you run up against intellectual ability barriers in attempts to teach the ideas.
I think they very much do. They teach multiple methods to arrive at solutions really admiring the problem in many ways. My son has flourished with it, I’ve always thought it was a special kind of torture for the mathphobic.
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wrote on 22 Apr 2022, 21:22 last edited by
My rote learning of multiplication tables has served me well over the last 60 years.
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wrote on 22 Apr 2022, 21:31 last edited by
@Copper said in Geek humor:
My rote learning of multiplication tables has served me well over the last 60 years.
So has my memorization of the Nicene Creed.
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wrote on 22 Apr 2022, 21:57 last edited by
And the Pater Noster
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wrote on 23 Apr 2022, 02:38 last edited by
Re: “rote learning of multiplication tables”
It’s really just caching for some frequently used information. Some information is more frequently needed than others, so it’s worthwhile to commit them to memory for quick access rather than to recompute or re-lookup every time the information is needed.
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wrote on 27 Apr 2022, 17:41 last edited by
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wrote on 27 Apr 2022, 18:17 last edited by
@jon-nyc said in Geek humor:
Would be cool to live in a time when caricaturists were indistinguishable from portraitists.
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wrote on 9 May 2022, 15:19 last edited by
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wrote on 10 May 2022, 01:53 last edited by
I wanted to add a third but it was an uphill climb.
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wrote on 10 May 2022, 04:10 last edited by
@jon-nyc said in Geek humor:
I wanted to add a third but it was an uphill climb.
Please. I can't bear the burden of another bad pun.
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wrote on 10 May 2022, 05:18 last edited by
@jon-nyc said in Geek humor:
I wanted to add a third but it was an uphill climb.
You just need to be boulder,
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wrote on 10 May 2022, 08:14 last edited by
This thread is going downhill fast…
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wrote on 11 May 2022, 03:10 last edited by
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wrote on 13 May 2022, 15:23 last edited by