dormouse1953: (Default)
[personal profile] dormouse1953
Saw this on the Independent's website.

http://ind.pn/1QvJYVT

It was a problem involving probability that allegedly stumped a large number of students taking a maths GCSE.

It is things like this that mean I never could be a teacher.  One look at that problem and jotting down a couple of things on paper, and the answer was obvious.  (Except, I was having my breakfast at the time, I wrote the first line of the solution and then when I went back to it I misread a multiplication sign as a plus sign and went down a blind alley.)  I don't think I could explain it any simpler.

Indeed some years ago I was at a family gathering for Christmas and my nephew had some A-level maths questions to do.  (My nephew is now in his forties, so you can probably work out how long ago this was.)  My mother said I could help him.  My sister (his mother) said don't be silly, it was over twenty years since I did A-level maths.  As it happened, the first problem we looked at involved factorising a polynomial.  (I'm sure that was the sort of problem I would have done at O-level, not A-level.)  I immediately wrote down the first line of how to solve this and my nephew didn't understand.  I tried to exlain, but nothing I said made any sense to him.  We stopped the exercise right there and I never helped him with his A-levels again.  (Although, when he was at university, I did get a phonecall from him one night, asking me to explain some physics problem, I think it was Compton scattering.  But I'd been out at a concert and by the time I got home and he was able to phone me, he'd drunk half a bottle of wine and it was difficult to explain this over the phone.)

I do wonder about the polynomial factorisation whether there was a generation problem.  I was of the generation that did not have calculators when at school (except for my trusty slide rule in the sixth form).  I was taught long division at primary school and the method I knew for factorising polynomials was based on that.  Do children get taught long division these days?

But the upshot is, I think if I was trying to teach maths to someone today, my answer to any question would be, "That's obvious".

Date: 2015-06-05 01:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] were-gopher.livejournal.com
Only one thing to say really.

Date: 2015-06-05 01:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pauldormer.livejournal.com
Curiously, when notified of this reply by Thunderbird, the above embedding doesn't work. Instead of getting Mr Lehrer, I get a screen saying "An error has occurred. Unable to execute Javascript."

Date: 2015-06-05 02:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] were-gopher.livejournal.com
That's javascript for you.

Profile

dormouse1953: (Default)
dormouse1953

January 2025

S M T W T F S
   1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 30th, 2025 03:28 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios