Q&A - P3 Math
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Hmmm… interesting. Let me digest first before I try to explain to my son, else I will confuse him even further. Someone suggested using fifty cent coins and $1 coin, I think it is worth trying. Thanks everyone for trying to help.
Btw, 2ppaamm, would you consider 2/1 an improper fraction at tertiary level? -
2ppaamm:
Well, he may end up trying to tell his teacher about invisible denominators and then get into more trouble....
But first, get the teacher to define 'fractions'. You will realize her definition has to be pretty sharp! -
2ppaamm:
oh yea, might as well point out the difference between proper and improper fractions, include in the examples to show that division by proper fraction results in a greater quantity while division by sth greater than 1 results in smaller quantity.A slightly brighter child at P3 will ask:
What about 1/2 divide by 8/3? Does your rule still apply? or is 8/3 no longer a fraction? -
CoffeeCat:
Then, the teacher's generalization is not accurate and of course some kids will be confused.
oh yea, might as well point out the difference between proper and improper fractions, include in the examples to show that division by proper fraction results in a greater quantity while division by sth greater than 1 results in smaller quantity.2ppaamm:
A slightly brighter child at P3 will ask:
What about 1/2 divide by 8/3? Does your rule still apply? or is 8/3 no longer a fraction?
My kids were definitely confused.
Tell you another one. Is there such a thing as a fraction of ratios?
That means the numerator is a ratio, the denominator is a ratio. No, the teacher said. Then, is there such a thing as fraction of fraction? Meaning numerator fraction, denominator fraction? Yes. Then, is a ratio of 1:2 equals to 1/2? Yes. Then, there is such a thing as a fraction of ratios?
Principal and teacher got so angry with my P4 son for the above. Yes, it was escalated all the way to Principal, vice-principal and to a professor in NIE and MOE.
O, forgot to mention he was later told he should not bother about ratios and use ratios for his answers, since ratios are not taught in P4.
Silos in learning?
So bottom line is, I know for sure whether 2/1 is an improper fraction or not, I think most of us know that too. But, the correct answer is not important, but what the teacher wants. Well, that's how my children survived primary school - by not challenging any more. -
2ppaamm:
Then, the teacher's generalization is not accurate and of course some kids will be confused.
oh yea, might as well point out the difference between proper and improper fractions, include in the examples to show that division by proper fraction results in a greater quantity while division by sth greater than 1 results in smaller quantity.CoffeeCat:
[quote=\"2ppaamm\"]A slightly brighter child at P3 will ask:
What about 1/2 divide by 8/3? Does your rule still apply? or is 8/3 no longer a fraction?
My kids were definitely confused.
Tell you another one. Is there such a thing as a fraction of ratios?
That means the numerator is a ratio, the denominator is a ratio. No, the teacher said. Then, is there such a thing as fraction of fraction? Meaning numerator fraction, denominator fraction? Yes. Then, is a ratio of 1:2 equals to 1/2? Yes. Then, there is such a thing as a fraction of ratios?
Principal and teacher got so angry with my P4 son for the above. Yes, it was escalated all the way to Principal, vice-principal and to a professor in NIE and MOE.
O, forgot to mention he was later told he should not bother about ratios and use ratios for his answers, since ratios are not taught in P4.
Silos in learning?
So bottom line is, I know for sure whether 2/1 is an improper fraction or not, I think most of us know that too. But, the correct answer is not important, but what the teacher wants. Well, that's how my children survived primary school - by not challenging any more.[/quote]hmm, i don't understand why the adults were angry, unless they were stumped. However your son's story sounds like how those curious minds are harmed by the rigid educational system.
But i definitely don't understand what you were trying to put across with relation to my earlier posts (i assume there is since u quoted it). And i don't know what your \"teacher's generalization\" refers to. -
Hi Coffeecat,
this is the generalization: a fraction divided by another fraction always gives a bigger fraction.
This statement cannot be true. Too general. I believe jesschan’s kid was confused by the teacher, but I would be confused too, in a different way. Who’s to tell who is receiving this message. Unless, as I mentioned before, ask the teacher to define ‘fraction’ first. -
CoffeeCat:
They were angry because my son's answer was marked wrong, and he lost 5 marks. But he took so long to resolve this: own teacher, marker, HOD, VP, Principal. I finally took over. By then, results was already submitted to MOE. To the school, he has to be wrong. But when I proved to them time and again that they marked it wrong, even found errors in marking in another child's paper (because I wanted to see what is the 'right' answer to them) - same question. They were furious with me.hmm, i don't understand why the adults were angry, unless they were stumped. However your son's story sounds like how those curious minds are harmed by the rigid educational system.
My son later told me never to fight for him again for Maths question. Well, he went on and topped the school for P6 prelim Maths in the school scoring 99.5%. Why wouldn't they be angry. I was told I was not the expert and should not challenge them.
Well, since then, I've not bothered to challenge any marking. Don't even bother to solve primary maths questions. Good lesson learnt. -
2ppaamm:
How could they be angry, your son is so smart, I would have never thought of ratios being used that way!My kids were definitely confused.
Tell you another one. Is there such a thing as a fraction of ratios?
That means the numerator is a ratio, the denominator is a ratio. No, the teacher said. Then, is there such a thing as fraction of fraction? Meaning numerator fraction, denominator fraction? Yes. Then, is a ratio of 1:2 equals to 1/2? Yes. Then, there is such a thing as a fraction of ratios?
Principal and teacher got so angry with my P4 son for the above. Yes, it was escalated all the way to Principal, vice-principal and to a professor in NIE and MOE.
O, forgot to mention he was later told he should not bother about ratios and use ratios for his answers, since ratios are not taught in P4.
Silos in learning?
So bottom line is, I know for sure whether 2/1 is an improper fraction or not, I think most of us know that too. But, the correct answer is not important, but what the teacher wants. Well, that's how my children survived primary school - by not challenging any more.
:goodpost:. I'm scared for those students learning under those professors from NIE and MOE... :nailbite:
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Muffins:
I'm scared for those students learning under those professors from NIE and MOE... :nailbite:
No, my son was not taught by these professors and folks from MOE. They got dragged in because they could not convince me or my son that his answer was wrong. In the end, they just said wrong means wrong. Case closed.
For us, life goes on. I learnt that my children's education has to be in my own hands.
My son never loved Maths again, though he did ok for PSLE and into sec school. now, he is pursuing fine arts. He said he'll never do maths again. I sometimes wonder how this episode would have affected him, and whether it have been better if I did not even pursue the truth. -
Yea i realised my faulty generalization. However i believe the kid was confused due to the whole number analogy.
And why will the marks be submitted to moe? What’s the error you found in their marking.
IMHO you shouldn’t stop solving primary maths questions just because its not easy to challenge marking (we all know how frustrating bureaucratic stuff are), because probably your son got his good genes in maths from you!.
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