Maths is something I have always been praised for being good at, both from my parents and from teachers. My experience of maths was for the most part a positive one in that I was always in the top group and when I moved to high school I competed for the top three seats in the class. This being said it wasn’t something that I necessarily enjoyed!
I was just good at accepting what the teacher said and applying the set rules. Most of my maths revision even for Intermediate 2 was repetition. I would go over and over past papers applying what I had written in my notes until it sank in. I do recall other students saying things like ‘But why do we do that?’ and thinking ‘you just do!’
I always told myself that I liked maths because there was always one right answer but after our input with Tara I know that this is a ‘maths myth.’ Following her input I have become increasingly concerned with the way I was taught maths after reading ‘Mathematics explained for primary teachers’ by Haylock. I now recognise that my teachers didn’t explain the answer to the students who asked ‘But why do we do that?’ because they were most probably taught to just accept the answers in the same way I was.
In terms of teaching maths I now have some apprehension…I don’t want to set children up to fail by teaching in a prescriptive way which encourages mindless repetition and little engagement. I look forward to learning new approaches and techniques and I shall endeavour to apply them within my practice and look for new ways to explore maths with my pupils which engage them and encourage them to ask questions.
Thanks for sharing this, your concerns mirror some of my own. I have also been guilty of learning by rote – following the procedure to reach the ‘correct’ answer, without always understanding why. I hope that recongising this issue now will allow plenty of time for us to address it and (with any luck) become successful teachers.