Within home schooling communities, Singaporean style math has quite a following. Singapore also tends to score quite high on international exams. Basically, they focus on fewer topic more deeply. They also teach from concrete to abstract. I wish American schools would adopt this.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singapore_math
ivansavz|5 years ago
If you think about it, it makes sense: if the problem in math is people get stuck at some foundational step where they are required to "get" something, and start to think they "suck at math" because they are missing this piece, then making the steps VERY small will make sure everyone can make those steps, thus making everyone "good at math."
Similar to Singapore math, it's not based on a "textbook" that you read but an "exercise book" that you write and solve exercises in. I don't have personal experience with teaching using this approach, but I have heard many good things.
books: https://www.amazon.com/s?k=jump+math (non free) samples: https://jumpmath.org/jump/en/learn podcast: https://www.cbc.ca/listen/live-radio/1-63-the-current/clip/1...
red_admiral|5 years ago
And we used Cuisenaire Rods instead of bar charts.
unknown|5 years ago
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mkoubaa|5 years ago
jl2718|5 years ago
dredmorbius|5 years ago
http://ee263.stanford.edu/archive/
Chris2048|5 years ago
dy = dx + 3dz + 2