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Frazz by Jef Mallett for December 11, 2014
Transcript:
Mrs. Olsen: You know who else struggled with math? Mr. Frazier. Girl: Frazz? How? Mrs. Olsen: He had vision problems. Girl: Frazz doesn't wear glasses. Mrs. Olsen: I didn't say he had eyesight problems. Girl: I thought you said he couldn't see the board. Mrs. Olsen: He couldn't see the point.
KZ71 over 10 years ago
Mrs. Olsen canât see the disconnect⊠and those Far Side lenses ainât gonna help.
Robert Spillane Premium Member over 10 years ago
Hi,Iâm a sixth grade teacher in Santa Rosa, California. Just today I was telling my class that the reason weâre working with models of dividing fractions is because that leads to understanding the math ( this is not the first time weâve talked about this). Most of them know the algorithm, though I have not used it at all this year so far. Theyâre itching to flip the divisor and multiply, but we wonât do that for another couple days. I tell them that thatâs how I was taught division of fractions, and I didnât understand why it worked or what it meant to divide by a fraction. The way most teachers at my school are teaching now is to focus on the understanding. Once you understand, you can choose the formula you need and get a sense of whether the answer makes sense or not. Iâll be telling them what you said about the understanding clicking with real examples, and how memorizing the rules is not the whole story â itâs the deeper concepts that we want them to figure out, explore, and make a part of their thinking.Thank you for sharing your experience!
HonoBear over 10 years ago
Math was easy, back when I was in school. Has it changed?
GoBlue over 10 years ago
I had the same vision problem in college calculus.. I kept asking the prof what use in life would I have of being able to graph that parabola.. 40 years later, I still have not had to graph one. :) Iâm sure that engineers and such have some use for it, but why force a medical technologist to take a class that has no use in the field? Iâd rather spend the time and money on a class that taught me something useful.
mblase75 over 10 years ago
The problem with learning math is simply that itâs not how the human brain is (usually) designed to work. Our brains are hardwired for things like spoken language, music and pattern recognition, but numbers beyond one-two-three and rigid logic are simply not useful survival traits, evolutionarily speaking.
puddleglum1066 over 10 years ago
To all those who say thereâs no point in learning math beyond simple arithmetic unless youâre planning to be a scientist or an engineer, I can only sayâŠ
âŠthe gambling industry thanks you.
Pipe Tobacco Premium Member over 10 years ago
Wow! Mrs Olsen is brilliant and I am very glad for todayâs comic. Frazz not âseeing the pointâ is a flaw of HIS in my opinion. The reality is that whether or not you think you will ânever use this mathâ in your real lifeâŠ. is NOT THE POINT of learning math. Students who learn math and the conceptualization behind mathematics BENEFIT from being able to think and reason more broadly, and are able to view the world less myopically than they otherwise would. That is the âpointâ behind learning math for most of us after we complete the basics.
JustHereForTheMoney over 10 years ago
blah!
hippogriff over 10 years ago
Nabuquduriuzhur: I experienced your point. I was sick the week the class took up factoring. Returning, I asked the teacher what is was. She replied, âDonât worry, youâll pick it upâ and dismissed me from her presence. I think it has something to do with what times what equals the number under consideration, but short of trial and error, I donât know how to do it, what does one do with prime numbers, or why it is done at all. As a result, I have no effective ability in math, which I think I might have enjoyed..As for what use it is for those not using math in daily life, first, as the Numbers TV show stated, âWe use it every day.â; second, jobs get outmoded quite rapidly these days, and any knowledge is going to make it easier to requalify for another job; and third, we are supposedly intelligent animals and know lege should be treasured for its own value.
unca jim over 10 years ago
All my HS math courses were taught by 22 and 30 y/o females who taught by rote and memorization of âthe rulesâ⊠nothing âappliedâ or physical demonstration, leaving us boys bomfozzled as to what the heck they were trying to tell us. The girls seemed to âget itâ right off.. Later, in the Army Advanced Electronics school, I was suddenly flummoxed by the ton of math thrown at me and was falling behind. I found a civilian male tutor who taught me all the math I REALLY should have learned in HS who had me up to speed in just a week and a half. Itâs all in âspatial conceptsâ and like it or not, the wiring difference between the female brain and male circuitry use COMPLETELY different schematics and programming, thank gawd for THAT !!
dzw3030 over 10 years ago
Way back when, I was in tech school and my slide rule body had a blank area under the slide. Thatâs where I penciled in all the formulas I had trouble remembering. All that slipping & sliding during tests was me retrieving formula so I could solve problems on paper. It worked but my math skills were always marginal. (OK, pathetic)
Scott S over 10 years ago
I thought his name was Frazwell.
Carl R over 10 years ago
I was a TA in Operations Research in Graduate School, years ago. I found that people didnât have any trouble understanding the concepts, and they didnât have any trouble following the steps to solve problems. The problem they had was math phobia. If I wrote something on the board using math notation, their eyes glazed over, and they concluded that it was beyond their comprehension when it wasnât difficult at all. I have always believed that early on they should have been exposed to the notations, and told that the notation is no big deal. Instead the real math notation is hidden from them, and they are given the idea that it is somehow beyond them.
trollope'sreader over 10 years ago
Yes. Music is mathematic. Often musicians excell in math. Dave Brubeck was a mathematician.
Varnes over 10 years ago
Yes, there is an element of math in music. However, when used in music nowadays itâs almost always to actually break the rulesâŠ..Canât get away with that in mathâŠâŠIn algebra, right out of the shute, the order of operations rules get yaâŠ.
rgcviper over 10 years ago
Personally, just about all I know about math is that 2 + 2 = 22. (Or at least, it should be âŠ)
hippogriff over 10 years ago
comicsssfan: Thanks for the first indication that my deductions about factoring might be right, including that there might be something more efficient than trial and error. However, considering the absence was in the 1946-7 school year, it may be a bit late!