Now that the school holidays are over, its time for students and parents to prepare for the new school year. This article is good for students especially those interested in improving on their grade in Mathematics.
A new study suggests that with motivation and good teaching
strategies, even those who are convinced they'll never be facile with figures
can succeed in mathematics.
Innate intelligence — as defined by IQ tests — may provide a head start, but it's learning skills and determination that
ultimately add up to success, according to the new research.
"The critical determinant of growth in
achievement is not how smart you are, but how motivated you are and how you
study," said lead study author Kou Murayama, a postdoctoral fellow at the
University of California, Los Angeles. "Intrinsic motivation promotes
long-term growth in math achievement."
Math can throw some students off since it is based
on symbols and rules that can be hard to conceptualize, Murayama said.
"Learning strategies are different in math than they are in other
subjects," he said. "Math is a totally different language from what
students experience in daily life."
The research, published Dec. 20 in the journal
Child Development, is based on six years of data from a long-term German study
that assessed math ability in about 3,500 students in grades five to 10. At
each grade level, students took a math achievement test near the end of the
school year.
Student intelligence and self-reported motivation
and learning strategies also were assessed.
The study authors looked at whether student
motivation, study skills and intelligence could predict improvement in the
mathematical success over time. Intelligence was only correlated with math
achievement in the early years. Over time, what mattered most was motivation
and study skills.
"Student ability in math involves factors that
education can nurture," Murayama said. "Finding ways to motivate
students and teaching them study skills may be a critical way to help them
progress in math and other subjects."
For many students, the culture in which they're
learning makes a big difference, said Paul Goldenberg, distinguished scholar at
the Education Development Center, in Waltham, Mass.
"In Romania, the curriculum is pretty dull and
there are stereotyped teaching methods, but the kids are committed to learning
math because they perceive it as a really useful way to get a good job or be
able to leave the country," Goldenberg said. "The whole culture
believes it's possible. But in the U.S. we believe not everyone has a
mathematical mind."
Goldenberg said it's important to develop a sense
of ability in a child early on, especially when it comes to mathematics.
"By the time you're in high school, the math ideas are built on earlier
concepts and become really complex," he said. "Once you get to 'x + 3
= y,' all of a sudden the notations stand for a whole bunch of numbers."
What's the best way to motivate a child? "Try
to help students make connections between what they're learning and what
they'll need in the future," Murayama suggested.
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