By Jody
Worsham
All rights
reserved for Math-a-Diabetic Counseling
The biggest
challenge in raising a prepubescent tweenager is not the hormonal fluctuations
that at times can register a 12 on the Richter Scale or dealing with the
tragedy of having to wear jeans that do not have slits and slashes in them or
even keeping track of all the BF’s (that’s text talk for Best Friend) that can
change hourly. It isn’t even raising a
child when there is a 57 year age difference.
No, the real challenge is helping with sixth grade homework.
And it isn’t
even helping with all homework. Cutting
and pasting the solar system on construction paper, I can handle that. I can outline Texas on the map so she can
color it with map colors for social studies.
Heck, I even know the shape of Rhode Island. When it comes to sentence structure, I can
definitely help with simple subject and predicate. But what sends me to the chocolate cupcakes
faster than a Jenny Craig drop-out is math.
Granted,
it’s been 40 years since I was in a math class, but you’d think 2 +2 still
equals 4 but today’s
sixth graders are way beyond dealing with just plain numbers. They have PRIME numbers and COMPOSITE numbers and evidently numbers that aren’t even real.
sixth graders are way beyond dealing with just plain numbers. They have PRIME numbers and COMPOSITE numbers and evidently numbers that aren’t even real.
After an
hour of screaming and crying and shouting “When will this ever be used?” the
tween-ager sought help from a much calmer Dr. Hubby while I got chocolate
cupcake number one and tried to breathe normally. Five minutes later Dr. Hubby said he would
assume the supervision of the second grader’s homework AND buy me a condo on
Maui, IF I would continue helping with the sixth grade homework. Cupcake number two!
Math and a
right brained person do not mix. They
are not simpatico. They do not speak the same language, not on the same page, different
worlds. Problem: 8 divided by 2 X (3-2) to the second power
minus 4 = ????? To the math teacher’s credit,
she did provide a mnemonic device to help with tonight’s homework and this right
brained elderly parent. This is
good. I can deal with mnemonics; after
all, I learned to read music with F-A-C-E and Every Good Boy Does Find, at
least the treble cleft part.
To help in solving the problem, she gave us “Pass
the Potatoes My Dear Aunt Sally” which stood for the order of the steps you
follow to solve the problem: Parenthesis, Power, Multiply, Divide, Add, Subtract. “ Ok, get rid of the parenthesis
first so that’s 3-2, which is 1 then exponents ok that’s still one, so on to
potatoes…no that’s Dear… Abby … no wait….” After the second hour my neurotic
device was “Panicked Parent Malfunctioning During Arithmetic Session.” We
needed a break. Chocolate cupcake number
three.
Now with an
additional 1500 calories under my stretch pants and chocolate endorphins
coursing through my brain, I was sure we could finish the assignment before
morning… or I had to bake more cupcakes. I was mumbling “Now that’s 8 divided by 2
cups of flour on the harmonica times 1500 calories to the tenth power…” when I
heard the tweenager say “Never mind, I
got it. While you were licking the icing
off your cupcake, I called my teacher and my study partner. You were doing it all wrong, but thanks
anyway.”
And that’s
when I ate chocolate cupcake number four!
6 comments:
I love math but would never be able to figure out the way it is taught today. Cupcakes, now that is something that makes sense to me.
I thought math was new when my daughters were in school, but now that I'm handling fifth grade math for one granddaughter, I silently thank my daughter for giving the ninth grader innate comprehension of what numbers are up to and loving her sister enough to share.
I think the first 6 were smart enough NOT to ask for my help. Glad I'm not IN school now. Jody
Hi! I found you through Mommy Bloggers and so glad I did! I'm your newest follower and we're having a Christian Adoption Link Up on my blog! I'd love for you to link up your blog and connect with other Christian adoptive families on the net!
http://satisfactionthroughchrist.blogspot.com/2012/09/christian-adoption-link-up.html
In Christ,
Christie
So funny and so scary! I used to think I was smart. That went the way of whatever it is that you were describing.
Thanks for visiting my blog. I just read your post, you had me laughing out loud--which I needed. My kid does Everyday Math...no idea what it is. But apparently you can't add in a straight line anymore. He is only in 4th grade--thank goodness all the answers come home every week. Even still, I'm lost. He's on his own in junior high!
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