Actually spend some time with 6 year olds; tell me they can't learn all that and more inside of a month. Learn some actual math concepts (you likely know none; you know operations). Try teaching them to a child. Read the Mathematician's Lament. Stop parroting stupid tropes.
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Replying to @webdevMason
Ouch! I have a degree in engineering - I won't claim to remember every last bit, but I do know a few math concepts. I work with kids down to age 7 (although my fiancee teaches ages 5/6) and kids absolutely internalise ideas about being bad at things at that age.
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Replying to @DiarmuidOM @webdevMason
Didn't intend my original tweet to be particularly aggressive, so apologies if it came off that way. I'm sure I agree with lots of criticisms you have of the school system (different country, probably similar drawbacks). I also worry that parents don't understand fully...
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Replying to @DiarmuidOM @webdevMason
...which bits of the curriculum they can cut out without it impacting their kids down the line. Kids who get the idea that they're bad at maths carry it with them - the idea that learning history somehow makes up for that seems like a confirmation of that lack of understanding.
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Replying to @DiarmuidOM
You're not being aggressive. I'm being aggressive. There is no way for me to convey through text how disturbing I find it when someone anywhere near child education indicates they'd rather see a parent force an unhappy early education than let their child learn what they like.
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Replying to @webdevMason @DiarmuidOM
Do you know why so many children and adults hate math? Nothing about it is inherently aversive, though it is tricky— in large part because it's taught as a utility kit rather than an area of study. Few people know any real math. It's force, leading to trauma, netting mathphobes.
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Replying to @webdevMason
Wouldn't disagree with you (and I loved maths)! I would add that a lot of people dislike math because they believe they are bad at it, and THAT comes (often) from falling behind at some point and not catching up.
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Replying to @DiarmuidOM
Falling behind *what*? There is absolutely nothing within mathematics that tells a child that they are too slow or too stupid. That's what adults do when they create an environment where children compete directly and are under immense pressure to not request help.
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Replying to @webdevMason
I mean, sure, but also that's the system that's there, so parents should probably spend a bit of time on those maths worksheets!
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Replying to @DiarmuidOM @webdevMason
Have you a lot of experience in/of the education system apart from as a student btw? I find a lot of people generate very strong feelings about schooling based on their own experience as students and don't really re-visit it from an adult perspective.
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Yes, I spent 2018 observing students age 6-14. Most people feel their schooling was "fine." Moreso when they're currently subjecting their own children to it.
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