The power of the Common Core Math Standards: a story of one kid’s math fun
Lil j and I were playing with numbers to make a subway ride more fun.
(Above ground subway ride, M and Lil j.
M and Lil j have been doing a few simple sums and started to do a couple
of subtractions)
M: What is 10 minus 5?
Lil j: Huh?
M: Oh, um, what is 10 take away 5?
Lil j: Oh, 5.
M: Cool.
Lil j: What is 100 take away 5?
M: I don’t know. What do you
think?
Lil j: I don’t know.
M: (pause) How could we figure it out?
Lil j: Um (pause) Oh, wait, I know.
It is nine tens and a 5.
M: (pauses to think) oh yeah!
That is really, really cool!
And later that night, we relay this story to Big J and Lil j represents
her final answer as “Nine tens and a half of 10.”
Ok, so first off, I am super proud of my kid. She is 5 yrs old and doing this! Ok, now that is out of the way, the point of this
post isn’t really about showing off how cool my kid is nor to say that this is
a spectacular example of parenting. She
isn’t particularly talented and gifted (a piece of evidence for this is that
she didn’t score particularly high on the G&T exam and I know a kid who is
supremely talented in math and my kiddo is not at all like that). She is more or less your average kid.
The point of this post is to talk about the Common Core Mathematics
Standards. In NYS, where we live, the
NYS Math curriculum is built around the Common Core Math Standards. Here it says that for Pre-K kids, it says
that teachers should be aiming towards helping kids develop the following math
ideas during the whole pre-K year (I’ll just highlight the ones I think most
relevant to this story):
Operations and Algebraic Thinking
·
Understand addition as adding to, and understand
subtraction as taking from.
·
Understand simple patterns.
So, I see Lil j knowing that there is this pattern that 100 is made up
of a bunch of tens—in fact ten of those 10s to be exact. AND that “taking away 5” means to remove 5
from one of those tens. And that when
you remove 5 from one of those 10s, you only have 5 left (or in her second effort,
this is half of 10). Yeah, I’m pretty
blown away by all that math that she is doing all by herself and NOT BECAUSE I
TOLD HER WHAT TO DO! This is the kind of
math I see adults do all the time with money; a math historian said, this is
what is called “Money Math.”
Awesome, she is developing great skills that will help her deal with
her financial life!!! As an aside, as a
daughter of a small business owner, this makes my heart and my Chinese
immigrant parents’ hearts sing. Yeah,
she is 5 (ok, the proud parent is saying this but really I think we can help
most 5 yr olds to do this kind of thinking).
Next bit, she is showing to me she is able to do some of the math
practices (types of “habits” that math people and people good at math do):
·
Make sense of problems and persevere in solving
them.
Example: Lil j didn’t know the
answer at first. I let that slide
because I knew that if she couldn’t figure it out now, that is ok. As her mom, I had the luxury of time to work
with her on this. And right now, my goal
was to have fun with her, to let her feel ok with not knowing the answer, and
to have her know that this is something we can figure out but sometimes figuring
things out might take time.
·
Reason abstractly and quantitatively.
Example: I don’t know about the
reasoning abstractly yet. But I can see
that she is able to reason quantitatively.
She can get to the same correct answer for 100 – 5 using two different
ways. Ok, so what is cool is that it is
not a way I had originally thought to do so I was delightfully surprised. What I also don’t know is if she can explain
to me why she thinks those are the right answers and if she thinks those
answers are the same. So that is the
next step for me to follow-up on to see how she develops with this. Why is this kind of explaining important for
thinking about how to “reason abstractly and quantitatively”? I think, for me at least, it is mostly
because it can help me see how she is thinking.
It may not necessarily help her get better at doing arithmetic just by
being able to help me she how she is thinking (though it might because it can
help her walk herself through her own thinking). It will be important to be able to hold her
thinking out for other people to see so they can critique her thinking—something
she will need to get comfortable with later in life if she is ever to work with
other people or wants her own ideas to get better. The hive mind is so much better than the
single mind.
·
Look for and make use of structure.
Ok, so this is where I think I
can see some evidence to show me that she is doing this: She is using the
structure of “10 take away 5 is 5” AND she is using the structure of “10, 20,
30, 40….100” are a group of numbers that are just clusters of 10s. So 100 is a group that has 10 of those tens. Again, as I said above about money math—she is
so ready to be taking on the Benjamins (and the Lincolns and the Hamiltons!). I’m sure this kind of math thinking is also
going to be helpful for other things in life too, but really, for most of us,
this is about as basic as it can get in terms of utility of math.
·
Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning.
I think I see her
doing this too. For me, the evidence of
this is the same as the above bullet point.
So why did I just make you read through all of this? I want to thank the Common Core Math
Standards (and all the smart people who helped to write it) for helping my kid
learn how to do all of that cool math! Here
is how I think it worked out in this situation:
1)
I am a STEM teacher educator and have learned a
lot about the Common Core Math Standards.
I now have a tool that helped me see and understand what math growth
could look like—one that really helps kids develop strong, powerful tools that
will help them in life. At home, I am
learning how to supplement her math learning.
2)
The Common Core Math Standards is what NYS is
using to guide its curriculum expectations—meaning this is what they use to
guide what they think teachers should focus on in NYS schools. All of those things are simply guides and how
they are used really depends on the district, the schools, and the
teachers. My kid has had the wonderful
opportunity of being in a class of a special teacher who created a classroom environment
that helped her develop this way of thinking.
She spent at least 8 hours a day, 5 days a week with this wonderful
person. That is a heck of a lot of time
to be learning how to be a human being with one person.
Basically, the Common Core Math Standards created a situation where my
kid is surrounded by adults who learned how to value, see, and create learning
experiences where she could do this kind of awesome math thinking. I think the theme I might be trying to
promote here is that the Common Core Standards are really helpful IF we can get
parents and teachers to align together with them. And then when that happens, really really
cool things can grow.
Ok, the next step would be to figure out how to actually get parents
and teachers to work together on this to make the magic happen. I’m sure there are lots of smart folks out
there who can chime in on this.
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