Math Anxiety – Early Math Counts https://earlymathcounts.org Laying the foundation for a lifetime of achievement Mon, 30 Dec 2019 22:52:18 +0000 en-US hourly 1 183791774 How to Foster a Positive Relationships with Math https://earlymathcounts.org/how-to-foster-a-positive-relationships-with-math/ https://earlymathcounts.org/how-to-foster-a-positive-relationships-with-math/#respond Wed, 19 Oct 2016 12:04:11 +0000 http://www.mathathome.org/blog1/?p=3803 posted by Sasha Fajerstein

More often than not, when I tell people I am a high school math teacher, the response I get sounds something like “Wow, that sounds awful. I hated math in school” or “Oh. I am so bad at math!”math-confusion

At the very beginning of each school year, I give my students an assignment called “My Mathematical Biography.” This assignment includes questions about students’ past experiences with math, expectations for the coming school year, feelings about math in general, and more. Some students put a great deal of effort into this assignment while some answer each question in only one or two sentences. Regardless of the effort a student puts into the biography assignment, I have found the relationship between a student’s success in my class and the answer to the first biography question to be very interesting. The question reads as follows: Overall, how do you feel about math? Have you always felt that way, or were there specific experiences or moments that have given you that feeling? If the latter, what were they, and why were they important?

Negative feelings about math are often traceable to a previous teacher or class, but a positive relationship with math often is credited to parents or siblings.

The two most harmful attitudes to portray to children as a caregiver are either: you hate math and just aren’t a math person so that means they probably won’t be either or math has always come easily for you and it’s not hard so your kid shouldn’t be struggling with it. Both of these portrayals ignore the fact that each child has his/her own potential for success in math. My experience as a teacher has shown me that attitude and perseverance have just as much impact on success in math as predictive test scores. So how can you, as a caregiver, make sure that your child develops a positive attitude towards math?

  • Provide them with opportunities to learn from mistakes. Allow them to try problems that you know they may not be successful with on the first attempt.
  • Reinforce the idea that learning comes from trying new things. Try a new recipe with them or have them read a book aloud that they’ve never read before.
  • Only talk about your own math experience as a positive learning opportunity regardless of your grades or test scores. Say things like “I learned so much about ____ in ___ grade or ____ math class” or “The first time I ever thought about that was in ____ class.” Avoid saying things like “Oh I hated division problems,” “I was so bad at word problems,” or “That class was so easy for me!”
  • Highlight connections between math and the world. A great list of resources and lessons that provide connections between early math through adolescent math and real life applications can be found here: http://www.educationworld.com/a_curr/mathchat/mathchat019.shtml

Fostering a positive attitude towards math and mathematical concepts allows students to reach full potential in each class and become a strong math student from early childhood through adolescence and early adulthood.

 

 

 

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Math Anxiety and What You Should’t Do https://earlymathcounts.org/math-anxiety-and-what-you-shouldt-do/ https://earlymathcounts.org/math-anxiety-and-what-you-shouldt-do/#comments Tue, 03 May 2016 16:57:37 +0000 http://www.mathathome.org/blog1/?p=3666 Over the past few years I have thought a lot about math anxiety.  Before the Early Math Counts project and this blog, I never gave it much thought expect to acknowledge that it is a real thing and it matters.

I wrote about a friend whose life was forever changed by a teacher who told her she was “no good” at math and that one interaction altered the course of her life.  I wrote about how we can battle math anxiety through a variety of techniques and strategies that genuinely work.

Today, I present you with an article from the Washington Post that clearly explains why we need to stop telling children that we are bad at math. Take a look at this article and see how our adult behavior affects children’s performance and attitudes about math.

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Math Anxiety – 2 Cognitive Scientists Weigh in https://earlymathcounts.org/math-anxiety-2-cognitive-scientists-weigh-in/ https://earlymathcounts.org/math-anxiety-2-cognitive-scientists-weigh-in/#respond Sun, 24 Aug 2014 19:55:47 +0000 http://www.mathathome.org/blog1/?p=2975 I’d like to claim that I read every newspaper, magazine, or journal that comes across my desk, but the truth is that I just don’t have the time.  I do however, clip our articles, store old magazines with turned down pages, and keep a working list of “stuff I need to read.”

Now that we are back at work, I uncovered the summer edition of the American Educator, a journal published by the American Federation of Teachers, which is a quarterly journal of educational research and ideas.  I usually flip through this journal finding some things interesting and pertinent to my work but oftentimes not.  The cover of this edition caught eye as it was definitely designed for those of us who focus on young children’s education so I knew I needed to explore it a little more closely than usual.

This article, Math Anxiety: Can Teachers Help Students Reduce It? definitely caught my eye being the Math blogger and all.  2 cognitive scientists, one from the University of Chicago and the other from the University of Virginia explore the roots of math anxiety and ideas to combat it.

Take a look and tell us what you think?

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