Turning math into a sport to
solve problems
Students
are taken through a step-by-step process, with escalating challenges as they
develop greater fluency in pattern recognition and conceptual understanding of
numbers
Developing
mathematical skills is key to getting through school and college – and
increasingly a key to success at workplace as well. Many school kids, because
of lack of practice, seldom master these skills.
Why
do kids who willingly spend hours on a sports ground fail to do even a fraction
of that at home with their maths books? The answer is lack of an instant
feedback mechanism, which is non-judgmental (which keeps you engaged in the
sport) and the fear of failure.
Addressing
these issues is an educational product – an online program called ‘First in
Math’ – which seeks to convert fear of the subject into interest by turning it
into a sport – with its emphasis on instruction, practice and rewards and with
competitions across all levels in schools.
Mechanism
Students
are taken through a step-by-step process with escalating challenges as they
develop greater fluency in pattern recognition as well as conceptual
understanding of numbers, measurement and other operations.
Robert
Sun – Chairman, President and Chief Executive of Suntex International – creator
of the First in Math online programme said tools such as digital games will
enable students to become critical thinkers and problem solvers. He draws an
interesting parallel from history to highlight the impact of digital gaming.
He
points to the spectacular success of the flight simulator in bringing down
fatalities at aviation training schools.
The
key, he said, is to be able to impart skills in a ‘low risk’ environment, and
that his online math program draws inspiration from that philosophy. Robert is
emphatic that practice is the key to success in math.
He
says with a twinkle, “Asian students do not have any special gene that accounts
for their success in math. It just boils down to practice.”
Reception by schools
The
First in Math module has received a very good reception in the US, with over
6,000 schools adopting this programme. It has led to a dramatic rise in
performance scores, he said.
About
30 schools across India (reaching about 23,500 students) have been trying out
this programme for the past year, said Monica Patel, CEO of First In Math India
(P) Ltd.
Source | Business Line | 10 December 2015
Regards
Pralhad
Jadhav
Senior
Librarian
Khaitan
& Co
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