Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Finding Problems That Motivate Students

Time units may help with multiplication practice

According to my experience each child is a unique learner. Generally speaking, students are more motivated to solve a particular problem when the problem relates to something they find real, meaningful, or important. However, different children usually assign different degrees of importance to the same thing. So it is always helpful to find a topic that holds a student’s interest, and that can be easily connected to math.
For example, let’s say you want to help a student who is struggling with multiplication tables. You can start a session by asking how many hours are there in a day, how many minutes in an hour, days in a week, and so on and so forth. Most third graders will know the answers off the top of their head. Then you proceed to ask how many minutes are there in a day, how many hours in a week, and so on and so forth. Children will realize these are multiplication problems but each child will react with a different degree of enthusiasm –or apathy– to find the answer.
Students who somehow have a strong connection to time units will diligently work out these multiplication problems all the way down to the number of seconds in a week. With a little bit of help they will continue working until they get all the numbers right, even if they struggle with the multiplications tables all along. They do this because they want to know the answers. In their mind, these problems are real, not just an empty drill.
Some other kids do not care at all how many seconds are there in a day, so for them this particular set of problems will not be very motivating. You will have to find a different set of problems for them.
Even when students understand the concept of multiplication, and the basic rules to multiply numbers, they may feel that some questions do not justify doing all the work necessary to find the answer. It depends on how real or important the questions seem to them, because that is what makes them want to find the answers.

No comments: