Mathematics in elementary school is not just numbers. It's the foundation on which logic, engineering, and even artificial intelligence stand. If a child doesn't understand what a number is or doesn't learn the multiplication table in third grade, they will struggle their whole life. But how to make sure the child doesn't hate math and loves it? Let's figure it out with examples, games, and the horrors of Soviet textbooks. What is studied in 1-4 grades The elementary school math curriculum is standard. In first grade — numbers, counting up to 10, addition and subtraction within this decade. One-step problems. In second grade — counting up to 100, crossing the decade, multiplication table for 2-5, two-step problems, concepts of "perimeter" and "area" of simple shapes. In third grade — the entire multiplication table, division with remainder, multiplication and division of multi-digit numbers by a single-digit number, fractions (initial concepts), units of time, length, mass, speed. In fourth grade — multi-digit numbers (up to a million), operations with them, equations, fractions (comparison, addition, and subtraction with the same denominators), percentages (beginning), problems of catch-up and head-on movement. It seems simple. But it's in the elementary school that algorithmic thinking is laid down. If a child doesn't understand how multiplication works, they will never understand how an integral works. Therefore, "It's just simple" cannot be ignored. Why do children hate math in school It's not the children who hate. Children love to count when it's about candies or toys. They hate the method of presentation. Boring examples in columns where you have to rewrite 30 identical actions. A teacher with a stern voice who scolds for a mistake. The fear of "not understanding correctly". A perfect storm. The second reason is parents who press. "You should solve it on five," "look at your neighbor, she managed, but you didn't." The child begins to associate math with dange ...
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