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Date:      1 Jun 2006 22:07:38 -0000
From:      Larry Shiller <marketing@shillermath.com>
To:        freebsd-chat@freebsd.org
Subject:   Your June 2006 ShillerMath Tidbit
Message-ID:  <20060601220738.15901.qmail@borg.phpwebhosting.com>

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   ShillerMath Tidbits: Common Math Learning Myths

   [parentzone.gif]
   Debunking Learning Myths

   You mean math isn't taught???
   Teachers, students, and administrators often have certain basic
   expectations when evaluating and using math curricula. Most expect
   that a math curriculum will first teach students a specific concept or
   skill and will then drill them on it: "Here's what you're going to
   learn today, and we're going to drill to make sure you know it."
   However it is unlikely this approach will result in particularly
   motivated, excited, or interested students.
   Consider the excitement experienced by the folks who first discovered
   the basic foundations of mathematics 5,000, 3,000, 1,000 and even 100
   years ago. Wouldn't it be wonderful if there was some way to let our
   children experience the same joy of discovery?
   Consider the three possible outcomes of a lesson:
    1. The student gets it and wants to move on. This usually happens
       when the learning styles of the student and the lesson don't
       match. Drilling will only promote boredom and resistance.
    2. The student gets it and wants to practice and explore. This
       usually happens when the learning styles of the student and the
       lesson are aligned. Moving on before the student has closure
       creates anxiety. Let students practice and explore until they
       reach closure, whether that's 5 minutes, an hour, or a week!
    3. The student doesn't get it. Drilling will only promote low
       self-esteem and frustration. Instead put the lesson aside and
       revisit it every few days until the student is developmentally
       ready for it.

   The bottom line? Math is not taught, it's learned! And it's learned at
   a pace defined by the student. A guided discovery-based approach
   fosters positive feelings towards math learning and builds a solid
   math foundation that will last a lifetime. As Maria Montessori said,
   children have "absorbent minds." Providing children with appropriate
   environments that allow them to learn through discovery reaps huge
   improvements in performance that can lead the USA out of the bottom
   20% among industrialized nations in math ability. In a future tidbit
   we'll explore how discovery-based learning can be accomplished in a
   classroom with students having a variety of skills and knowledge.

   In the next ShillerMath Tidbit we will share another exclusive SAT
   tip.
   [funnybone.gif]

   Where there's fire... Attending a conference and sharing a hotel room,
   a physicist, an engineer, and a mathematician were asleep when a fire
   broke out in one corner of the room. Only the engineer woke up, who
   saw the fire, grabbed a bucket of water, and threw it on the fire,
   putting it out. Then the engineer re-filled the bucket, threw more
   water on the ashes for insurance, and went back to sleep. A little
   later, another fire broke out in a different corner of the room. This
   time only the physicist woke up. The physicist saw the fire, measured
   its intensity, saw what material was burning, and carefully measured
   exactly 2/3 of a bucket of water, at which point the physicist threw
   the water on the fire, just putting it out, and went back to sleep. A
   little later a third fire broke out in a different corner of the room.
   This time only the mathematician woke up. The mathematician saw the
   fire, saw that there was a bucket (and observed it not to have a
   hole), turned on the faucet, and saw that there was water available.
   The mathematician then thought, "Aha! A solution exists!" and promptly
   went back to bed.

   I hope you enjoyed this short math break.
   Sincerely,
   [lssig.jpg]
   Larry Shiller
   Publisher
   After months of creative and detailed work by our staff, ShillerMath
   now has a new web site, with free white papers, downloads, and
   diagnostic tests for ages 4-12. Please [1]visit and get your freebies
   today!

   Did you enjoy this Tidbit? Please tell your friends, family, and
   fellow parents, teachers, administrators, librarians, and local
   homeschool groups. Thank you for [2]spreading the word!
     _________________________________________________________________

   What is ShillerMath?
   ShillerMath publishes research-based math curriculum, music,
   manipulatives, and worksheets for ages 4-12, with beautifully designed
   lessons, diagnostic tests with answer keys, catchy math songs, and
   Montessori-based manipulatives. No Montessori or math knowledge is
   required and there's zero lesson preparation - just read what's in
   quotes and you're good to go! Students using this approach
   consistently outperform their peers. Larry Shiller, ShillerMath
   founder and President, has a math degree from MIT. The ShillerMath
   curriculum includes authoritative materials and lessons used by
   thousands of Montessori schools and is the math curriculum of choice
   for public, private, and homeschooled students throughout the world.
   Plase visit the [3]ShillerMath site for all the details on this proven
   and amazingly effective product.

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References

   1. http://www.shillermath.com/sm/home.php?src=tidbit20060601&email=freebsd-chat@freebsd.org
   2. http://www.shillermath.com/sm/home.php?src=tidbit20060601&em=freebsd-chat@freebsd.org&url=recommendnews.php
   3. http://www.shillermath.com/sm/home.php?src=tidbit20060601&em=freebsd-chat@freebsd.org
   4. http://www.shillermath.com/sm/unsubscribe.php?Unsubscribe=freebsd-chat@freebsd.org
   5. http://www.shillermath.com/sm/home.php?src=tidbit20060601&em=freebsd-chat@freebsd.org&url=privacy.php



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