Worded Maths Promblems
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Worded Maths Promblems
Hi
My ds finds it very difficult to follow long worded maths problems
I would appreciate some advise on how these can sort of questions can be tackled and also can you please recommend a good source of material for hi to practice with.
He has just started year 5 at school and is preparing for the Latymer exams.
Many thanks
My ds finds it very difficult to follow long worded maths problems
I would appreciate some advise on how these can sort of questions can be tackled and also can you please recommend a good source of material for hi to practice with.
He has just started year 5 at school and is preparing for the Latymer exams.
Many thanks
Re: Worded Maths Promblems
Try first past the post numerical reasoning and the Schofield and sims books, they ease in to the worded problems.ritz667 wrote:Hi
My ds finds it very difficult to follow long worded maths problems
I would appreciate some advise on how these can sort of questions can be tackled and also can you please recommend a good source of material for hi to practice with.
He has just started year 5 at school and is preparing for the Latymer exams.
Many thanks
My DD is very good at maths but found worded problems difficult, after using these book she was fine with them and scored high marks on the maths section of CEM.
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Re: Worded Maths Promblems
I tell my students to understand all possible ways how a maths problem could be worded in english, understand what it means and then apply logic to convert into Maths.
If I reduce 5 from 11 --> reduce means subtract
If I take away 5 from 11 --> take away means subtract
I suggest that you do that homework first before trying word problems.
If I reduce 5 from 11 --> reduce means subtract
If I take away 5 from 11 --> take away means subtract
I suggest that you do that homework first before trying word problems.
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Re: Worded Maths Promblems
Good advice from parent 2013. Another good idea is for the student to read through the question at least twice. On the second path, he/she should highlight (in pencil, ink or whatever) the important words and numbers in the question. Words or phrases such as "is the same as" or "more than" are crucial and are surprisingly often ignored by the student.
Re: Worded Maths Promblems
Several times I've posted that students should make up their own problems.
For example, crisps cost 50p and an orange drink costs 70p. Now make up some questions.
First they do single-step.
' A packet of crisps cost 50p.
How much do I spend if I buy 8 packs?'
' A packet of crisps cost 50p.
How many can I buy for £2.50?'
What other ways could these be worded to mean the same thing?
Then move to multi-step. By constructing questions they learn how they work ...
For example, crisps cost 50p and an orange drink costs 70p. Now make up some questions.
First they do single-step.
' A packet of crisps cost 50p.
How much do I spend if I buy 8 packs?'
' A packet of crisps cost 50p.
How many can I buy for £2.50?'
What other ways could these be worded to mean the same thing?
Then move to multi-step. By constructing questions they learn how they work ...
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Re: Worded Maths Promblems
Thanks a ton for all suggestions!
Re: Worded Maths Promblems
I couldn't recommend the underlining / highlighting method unless it is a key word such as 'not'. Children often miss the negatives in word problems. I've just written and trialled 8 primary school tests aimed at yrs 1/2 and 5/6 (650 questions and 100+ responses to each one). It has given me a good insight into children's successful working. The children who had underlined key information often missed crucial words. They find it difficult to work out what to underline.
Agree with G55 for writing their own questions. It also helps with English comprehensions.
Agree with G55 for writing their own questions. It also helps with English comprehensions.
Re: Worded Maths Promblems
I agree with getting children's to make their own word problems, my ds hated word problems and would sit in the class silently when asked to do word problems, I tried getting him to underline it never worked, then we just had a go at making simple words problems which worked very well. He is now working on several steps word problems, he does find them difficult but able to do them it just takes alot of time, he will have a go at making his own long step word problems this week, I'm sure that will help him to work them out quicker.
Re: Worded Maths Promblems
I would also recommend sitting with them while they work through a variety of problems. Ask them to tell you how they are going to do it before they do it. You will quickly identify the sorts of question they struggle with / cannot do and you can then focus on these rather than worrying about all worded problems. I am sure there are a lot your child can do easily.
Re: Worded Maths Promblems
Cognitively fluency and the ability to remember basic mathematical operations are at the bottom end of the scale. Problem solving and reasoning are at the higher end - it isn't surprising that children find them hard.
Obviously some abstract maths is hard before experience has been gained but generally a word problem should contain the maths from a previous academic year. The numbers should be simpler as the child has to extract the maths before they can perform the operations required.
Missing number questions are a good bridge from pure arithmetic to problem solving and reasoning, e.g. 30 = 3 x box x 2
They remove the language problem but maintain the need for reasoning.
Obviously some abstract maths is hard before experience has been gained but generally a word problem should contain the maths from a previous academic year. The numbers should be simpler as the child has to extract the maths before they can perform the operations required.
Missing number questions are a good bridge from pure arithmetic to problem solving and reasoning, e.g. 30 = 3 x box x 2
They remove the language problem but maintain the need for reasoning.