I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food
A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking
Just found this thread and love it, being a) a maths teacher and b) 40 yrs old. Young enough not to remember slide rules, old enough that I spent most of school without a calculator, so I can actually do a lot of maths mentally (which drives my students nuts, because they can't).
A couple of observations. We began a laptop program at school recently, so all kids from years 8-12 got their own laptop. W naturally assumed the kids would be able to use them productively, being teenagers. We were wrong. Games, yes, Facebook, yes, but even google and email they struggled with using effectively, let alone Excel or Word. We're making good use of them, but its been interesting and challenging times for us.
Second, watched a TED video on maths education recently. The summary is that we really don't need to be teaching much algebra and calculus to kids these days, statistics is much more important (something I agree with). This educator found kids very comfortable with graphics calculators, and found that the average grade 5 kid could use them to solve problems that kids in yr 12 solve using integral calculus.
Interesting times in education at the moment, for many reasons
My daughter is in the final year of her Teaching Degree at the A.C.U., Brisbane. She is doing her practical placement , and has been offered an internship at this school. She says any credit is due to her mentor, a teacher with many years experience, who has taken her under her wing. Daughter says ' She is a grumpy old fart, who takes no crap, but has the total respect of the students' . Daughter has said she would do some things different, but keeps that to herself.Bob
I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food
A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking
Hopefully the school and teachers actually teach them both how and when to use them.
I'm not on any maths classes this year, (full timetable of Physics and science), but when teaching maths, I use weekly or fortnightly tables tests with my students. They learn that calculators are no good because they're too slow for the speed of the test - much quicker to do them in your head. The kids usually enjoy it because after their first one, they get a small reward (sticker, stamp or similar) when they improve on their personal best. Gives all the kids the chance to get a bit of recognition for improving, even those that normally fail everything else.
I also increase the speed at which the tables have to be answered as the year progresses, which they don't enjoy so much![]()
Just out of curiosity, I wonder how many old timers here complaining about laptops and calculators at school these days happen to have a set of ratcheting ring spanners, air tools and cordless drills in their shed.
In my day, I had a pair of pliers, a set of screwdrivers and a sidchrome spanner set, and anything else was luxury![]()
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