Sunday, September 27, 2015

Common Core : A Work of The Mentally Unstable

Common Core is being debated in most school systems as to it's workability. Interesting how this comes across as the new norm to educate the next generation of students. One has to wonder who came up with this and whether they are mentally stable.

6 Steps to Subtract 2 Numbers: Common Core Homework in 1 Photo
Kelsey Lucas /           

For third-graders learning Common Core math in Georgia, there are four ways to subtract—and only four ways allowed. The picture above is just one of the methods for subtraction under Common Core straight from RedState editor in chief Erick Erickson’s third-grade daughter’s math book.
Missing from the four methods: borrowing and carrying numbers. You know, the old-fashioned-taught-the-same-way-for-decades-granny-method-not-approved-by-bureaucrats subtraction. 
According to this third-grade textbook, students must take about six steps (at minimum, depending how you count) to subtract just two numbers. And if you don’t show your work, circle the right numbers and “count up” correctly, you haven’t proven that you’ve mastered the “why” of the problem.
In a previous post where I highlighted two “Homework Helper” videos a local news station broadcast because parents were struggling with their children’s Common Core homework, it’s clear memorization is out—explaining the “why” is in.
I’d love to see some more techniques for problems formerly referred to as “simple” math. Please leave your own pictures of Common Core homework in the comments and share this absurdity with your friends.

It Takes a Teacher 56 Seconds to Explain How to Add 9 Plus 6

                                                             
                                                                     

Photo: Erick Erickson via ErickErickson.org

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