Learning and Teaching
Maths Tips for Parents
Article adapted from 7 Ways Parents Can Help Their Kids With Maths By Danijela Draskovic
Parents should try to involve their children in as many life decisions and day-to-day ‘adult’ tasks as possible. Notice, throughout helping them with their mathematical reasoning, parents will be simultaneously helping their children with life skills. Surprise surprise! Maths really is all around us.
1. Give your young children some pocket money and encourage them to manage it. You may even lend them some support in creating a budget. Do they have a goal to purchase a certain item? Let them save for it! How much should they put aside each week so they can buy their item in 3 months’ time? How much general spending money do they need? The discussions around their budget could be very powerful and could reveal some interesting
areas for exploration.
If the child is a bit older, you may discuss with them budgeting for a household. Perhaps let them create a weekly or monthly budget for running the entire house based on what they think the expenditures are. Then reconvene and have a discussion once they have finished. You may be surprised at how much they underestimate, and they may need to readjust the figures. A teenager may also be ready to consider borrowing or investing. This is a wonderful opportunity to discuss interest rates and make comparisons between different types
of loans or savings accounts.
2. Cook with your children. Cooking, as well as being an enjoyable and creative activity, also involves a variety of maths skills. Ask your child to amend the quantities of that pancake recipe that serves 6. How much flour would they now need for 3 servings? Or 2 servings? How about a tricky 7 servings? Through cooking, we are
forced to consider ratio and proportion, fractions, volume, time, addition, division, and many more. Added bonus: your children will also appreciate meals more if they have been
actively involved in creating them! Budgeting can also overlap wonderfully with cooking and parents are encouraged to take their children grocery shopping as well.
3. Grocery shopping. The shops are filled with
opportunities to ask your children important
mathematical questions such as comparing the value of buying items in smaller amounts to items in bulk. For example, which product offers the best value for money: 250mL of yogurt for $1.95 or 1L of yogurt for $7.50? How much will an entire meal of Pad Thai cost to prepare? What will be the cost per portion? Is it financially more efficient to buy ingredients
and cook this meal at home, or is it more economical to have that same meal from a restaurant?
4. Meaningfully involve children in planning for a holiday. Vacations offer rich opportunities to explore mathematical concepts such as distance, time, changing time zones, currency exchange rates, budgeting (again), purchasing travel insurance (comparing different policies), comparing costs of rent-a-car companies, etc. Road trips are great for estimating the time it will take to get from A to B. Do your kids understand the unit of km/h? With only a couple of questions, you will know the answer
to that. ‘If we drive at an average of 80km/h, how many kilometres will we travel in 3 hours?’ ‘How long will it take us to travel 120km?’. Speed, distance, and time are important
concepts in maths/science and need to be understood in meaningful contexts, not just taught out of a textbook.
5. Building? Renovating? Landscaping? Creating a veggie patch? Whatever hands-on project you may be working on, involve your kids. Get them to draw a floorplan of their ideal family house (give them some restrictions otherwise you may end up with an indoor go-karting hall attached to a 100-seater cinema room right by the indoor wave pool). Discuss scale and proportion, units of measurement, materials, area, perimeter, and shape. Allow them to help you make the herb garden and work out the volume of soil needed to fill it. They can then go to Bunnings to buy that amount of soil. As a parent, you can watch to see their delight if they have gotten the quantity right, or if not, watch them revisit the problem and check where they went wrong.
Remember, it’s not necessarily important to get it right. They will learn more from their mistakes.
6. Incorporate maths-based games, problem-solving activities, and puzzles into family time. Make them fun, challenging, and accessible at many levels so that everyone in the family can enjoy it. Think ‘low floor, high
ceiling’ which means that it should be easily accessible even with low-level math skills (low floor) and that it can be extended or adapted for those who are mathematically capable (high ceiling). When giving kids riddles or problems
to solve, avoid giving away the answer too soon. You are robbing them of discovering it for themselves. Instead of feeling the thrill and accomplishment that they have worked on
a problem and found a solution, they will feel the let-down of not having had enough patience and determination to reach the solution themselves. Let the child have ample time to consider, ponder and grapple with the problem. If they start to give up, give them a little clue to nudge them in the right direction. After solving
any maths problem, ask the child questions about it: ‘How did you arrive at your solution?’ ‘Could there be more than one answer?’ ‘Is there another way to solve this problem?’ ‘Do you see any patterns?’ ‘Does your answer make sense?’
7. Open the lines of communication. Allow your child to come to you when they do not understand something and empower them to ask for help. Make sure your child understands that nobody is born knowing everything and that marks and grades do not define them.
Do not tell your child off for a low grade, instead have a discussion as to why that grade is as it is and how to improve it. Teach them to value the process of learning, and not only the final result on their report cards. If your child embraces learning and develops a love and passion for it, you have set that child up for life. Even when they leave your protective nest and go forth to TAFE or University or the workforce, you will know that they are motivated internally and value education not just the end product.
Original Article link
Deborah Courtney
Director of Learning and Teaching