Times Tables, Tabled?
Dr. Wendy Ghiora – Posting #112 – September
3, 2012
In an
article entitled: The 'Ugly Sisters' of the teaching unions want to hold our children
back,
By Kathy
Gyngell (PUBLISHED: 11 June 2012), we learn that the United States isn’t the
only country replete with forces trying to “dumb down” our public educational
system. Chris Keates, Secretary General
of the British Teacher’s Union, claims that teaching children to recite poetry
or their times tables off by heart will ‘shackle teachers’ discretion’. Sound familiar?
Ms. Keates
was responding to Britain’s Secretary of Education, Michel Gove’s long awaited
and much needed reform proposals for primary school education. “When the ugly
sisters of the teachers unions (Chris Keates and Mary Bousted) have their say
it is always negative, never positive. It is always why not, never how to,”
according to Kathy Gyngell.
Michael
Gove’s proposed reforms for the primary school curriculum are actually pretty
basic.
If
expectations of both teachers and pupils hadn’t fallen so low, they would not
even be newsworthy.
“If you look
at the small print what Mr. Gove is demanding is not much by good private
primary standards. He is simply aspiring
for children to know their times tables up to 12 by the time they are nine; to
be able to add, subtract, multiply and divide decimals such as 32.4 or 4.78 by
the end of primary school; to be able to learn and recite by heart from the age
of 5. He also wants children to start learning foreign languages in primary
schools and to reintroduce Latin.”
So far, I
really like this guy. I’m waiting for “the other shoe to drop,” to see why
anyone would oppose Mr. Gove’s efforts.
Ah, but I digress . . .
According to
the article, precious little is currently demanded or expected. For example the current times table ‘target’
is just to 10 by Year Six. Worse, because the target only has to be met by then
no one gets unduly alarmed if the children do not begin to master them in the
years before. Wow! This mirrors the
current practice in The United States.
This brings
us to the biggest obstacle these basic reforms face and which is why they have
been so long in coming, despite ever worsening literacy and numeracy standards.
The article
goes on to describe how ‘traditional’ reforms do not ‘sit well’ with the
teaching practices that teachers have been trained in and indoctrinated into. That
is why learning number facts for addition is still beyond many schools. It is
why the idea of achieving automatic recall runs headlong into the sacred
‘number line’ which requires kids to count on their fingers.
The dilemma
– or even tragedy – for Michael Gove is that to counter this culture he has to
be prescriptive (which must go against his liberal principles) to get rid of
the ideologically hidebound prescriptions that exist. He has to break the practices of progressive
education both in teacher training and in the classroom.
Parents will
tell you that poetry recitation in state primaries currently does not exist.
Yet at top private prep schools like Westminster boys learn to recite from the
age of 7, in front of the school assembly as well as the class.
This part
hit home for me. Now that I think about it, my favorite teacher was my third-grade
teacher, Mrs. Lewis. She was my favorite for many reasons, mostly because of
the simulations she created for various subjects we were studying. For example,
when we studied the U.S. Postal System, she had a simulated Post Office right
in our classroom. The unit included letter writing, buying stamps, and mail
delivery. Just think about how many different subject areas that encompasses. I
also, just recalled, she was the only teacher that ever had us memorize and
recite poetry in front of the class. It was scary at first, but we grew to
love it, and what a grand confidence booster it was! How many of you had a
teacher require memorized recitations?
“Learning
how to speak publicly and confidently with good enough diction to be understood
makes all the difference in a child’s life. One of the reasons for East Side
Young Leaders’ Academy’s success in getting their boys from the east end of
London into public school is that every child learns to declaim or recite by
heart from day one, whether or not he can yet read or write. The confidence of
these boys is a joy to watch,” Ms. Gyngell informs us.
But for the
average state primary school child there is no such chance, unless they are
lucky enough to go to Sunday school. Not even a sheet of poetry comes home from
the flagship primaries. Their teachers claim there is no time in their
overfilled curriculum. Sound familiar to anyone? At one of these schools when the ‘topic’ was
‘fairy tales’ did the teacher turn to Hans Christian Anderson or to Grimm’s
fairy tales – or even to the Oxford book of children’s verse? No. She put Walt Disney’s The Little Mermaid
in the class video machine for the afternoon while she did some record keeping
and administrative work during teaching time. This is the practice of many
teachers here as well!
So what hope
is there for these reforms happening? Will Britain or the United States ever
catch up with the rest of the world educationally? Fifteen-year-olds in the
U.S. ranked 25th among peers from 34 countries on the 2009 Program for
International Student Assessment. The
basics, such as times-tables are fundamental. Of course the students must first
understand what multiplication actually means and how it works. Once they grasp this concept,
memorization just makes their future math studies not only possible, but
a whole lot easier.
Teachers
claiming there is no time to teach multiplication tables, or to include
recitation, yet have time to show cartoons, in my humble opinion, may be in the wrong profession.
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