Submitted via IRC for chromas
Think you're bad at math? You may suffer from 'math trauma'
I teach people how to teach math, and I've been working in this field for 30 years. Across those decades, I've met many people who suffer from varying degrees of math trauma – a form of debilitating mental shutdown when it comes to doing mathematics.
When people share their stories with me, there are common themes. These include someone telling them they were "not good at math," panicking over timed math tests, or getting stuck on some math topic and struggling to move past it. The topics can be as broad as fractions or an entire class, such as Algebra or Geometry.
[...] One of the biggest challenges U.S. math educators face is helping the large number of elementary teachers who are dealing with math trauma. Imagine being tasked with teaching children mathematics when it is one of your greatest personal fears.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 05 2018, @03:26AM (2 children)
Idiot parents who themselves have math trauma and think rote memorization can get one through algebra.
It can't.
And I wish somebody would tell the people always going "I wanna be a programmer" that if you barely passed algebra, chances are that you will never be a programmer, no matter how much you blame half the planet's population. In the next life you'll realize how much of a childish jackass you were being with that approach.
(Score: 2) by hendrikboom on Monday November 05 2018, @03:18PM
Except that the procedural intuition you build up doing things in the real world can carry you far enough to gain confidence and bypass the blocks you set yourself up with in algebra.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 05 2018, @11:00PM
Can you cook? You can be a programmer. What else a recipe?
Do you knit? You can be a programmer. What else is pattern?
Remember the first programs where punched metal plates, strung together in a loop for the loom.
Now, will write code in less than 2k and use it pilot a spaceship to moon? Maybe not. But just like math, there are many different skill levels that required for the many facets of the business.
Go watch "Hidden Figures".