Maths - American style

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T.i.p.s.y

Maths - American style

Post by T.i.p.s.y »

I would have posted this in the maths section but as it is not related to 11+ questions I thought I may get more of a response here.

Does anyone know if Maths in the US is taught differently to the UK? I found a fantastic site that I have paid a subscription too and I have noticed they use slightly different names:

slope insteadof gradient
parenthesis when we would say brackets
using a "." instead of "x" for multiplication
using the phrase "standard form" when converting y=mx+c into Ax+By=C

These are not major things but as DS progresses I wonder if he will be taught something that could confuse him due to differing terminology. :?
zee
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Post by zee »

If they use a "." instead of "x" for multiplication, what do they use for a decimal point, or do they use a comma, as in some (all?) Euro countries?
T.i.p.s.y

Post by T.i.p.s.y »

Still use a "." for decimals - thankfully!
hermanmunster
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Post by hermanmunster »

I have seen "standard form" used in the UK ?? in some GCSE papers,

Also parenthesis is used fairly widely in scientific journals / american papers - won't hurt for them to hear a different word for brackets
(not that I am encouraging the use of american english any more widely than we have to, just been pragmatic)
T.i.p.s.y

Post by T.i.p.s.y »

I know they use standard form in the sense 2.6 x 10 -6 (imagine -6 is a power) but never called that in linear graphs but then I was taught the Scottish way! :? :lol:
solimum
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Post by solimum »

They call it MATH!!
hermanmunster
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Post by hermanmunster »

solimum wrote:They call it MATH!!
Yes - I really do not like that..... probably nothing actually wrong with it just :twisted: :twisted:
Milla
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Post by Milla »

"math" is just ghastly. End of.
KB
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Post by KB »

From limited experience at primary level they take a more 'old fashioned' approach in terms of calculations rather than problem solving so could be good for teaching method but need to make sure DS understands what he is doing.
If he does understand the underlying ideas then the terminolgy didn't ought to be an issue as he can apply what he learns.
Would make it clear to him that what he is taught in school over-rides the American system though, so he should use the same vocabulary as his teacher!
bromley mum
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Post by bromley mum »

I was telling a friend who lives in US that my DD had some mental maths homework for which she could not use a calculator. She was very surprised and said that she couldn't imagine American children doing any calculations without a calculator!!
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