I can see that Australian math exercises tend to lack certain emphasis that I see in the US past papers. Number sense is an area that I see the Americans and Singaporeans putting a lot of focus on. It makes perfect sense to do this. Excellent number sense allows kids to become good mathematicians in the most practical way.
I'd like to get your guys to share your experience about your time in primary schools and early years in HS on this area.
American tests often has questions like
How many tens do you have in 526?
How many tenths do you have in 27?
How many more hundreds 1.2 has over 1.04?
What's the value of 53 in 653478?
Then they give questions for kids to work on decimal numbers but they intended for the kids to use number sense, not algorithms to solve. They don't intend to give you time and working paper. For example, if one shirt costs $3.19, you pay for 3 shirts by $20 bill, what's the change? They then give multiple choices to pick.
They do not intend that you use algorithm to multiply 3.19 by 3 then take that away from $20.00. This way is too slow. You waste much time and cannot complete the long test and try to get a near perfect score. By having great number sense, you will get the problem solved in seconds. By approximating 3.19 x 3 as 3.20 x 3, you can do quick mental math to work out 9.6 then looking at $20, you know the answer is just above $10. So you can pick the answer within few seconds leaving time for much tougher questions along the way.
By teaching this kind of things to very young kids at primary schools, they intend for kids to get a great number sense. This stimulates the young minds to develop the nerve fibre needed for rapid mental calculations.
I don't seem to see this happening at Australian primary schools. In year 4, my own kid told me that the teacher gave a tough test at end of the year before writing up reports. My kid was asked by the teacher to help checking and grading the scores. Most kids got between 15%-30%. Only a few got over 50%. My kid scored about 30% above the runner up! This gap is unacceptable because I think my kid is about average level if I compare with Singaporean tests.
Any comments?
I'd like to get your guys to share your experience about your time in primary schools and early years in HS on this area.
American tests often has questions like
How many tens do you have in 526?
How many tenths do you have in 27?
How many more hundreds 1.2 has over 1.04?
What's the value of 53 in 653478?
Then they give questions for kids to work on decimal numbers but they intended for the kids to use number sense, not algorithms to solve. They don't intend to give you time and working paper. For example, if one shirt costs $3.19, you pay for 3 shirts by $20 bill, what's the change? They then give multiple choices to pick.
They do not intend that you use algorithm to multiply 3.19 by 3 then take that away from $20.00. This way is too slow. You waste much time and cannot complete the long test and try to get a near perfect score. By having great number sense, you will get the problem solved in seconds. By approximating 3.19 x 3 as 3.20 x 3, you can do quick mental math to work out 9.6 then looking at $20, you know the answer is just above $10. So you can pick the answer within few seconds leaving time for much tougher questions along the way.
By teaching this kind of things to very young kids at primary schools, they intend for kids to get a great number sense. This stimulates the young minds to develop the nerve fibre needed for rapid mental calculations.
I don't seem to see this happening at Australian primary schools. In year 4, my own kid told me that the teacher gave a tough test at end of the year before writing up reports. My kid was asked by the teacher to help checking and grading the scores. Most kids got between 15%-30%. Only a few got over 50%. My kid scored about 30% above the runner up! This gap is unacceptable because I think my kid is about average level if I compare with Singaporean tests.
Any comments?