Of course this doesn't work.
What was funny was that as he started to explain his trick, he stopped, looked at me and announced, "I'm pretty sure I just lost you."
I looked at him and said, "no, I'm with you. I see what you are saying."
He replied, "yeah, but I lost myself".

In the end, Larry was able to see how this trick works for adding but not for multiplying. Eventually he understood that when multiplying the 5 and the 9, if you reduce the 5 to a 4, you are really taking away 9 things. And if you increase the 9 to a 10, you are really adding 5 things. And that is why 4 x 10 = 40 while 5 x 9 = 45. A difference of 5.
I don't know whether I've explained this very well, but let me assure you that I got goose-bumps when Larry looked up with a fully illuminated light bulb hovering over his head.
I think you've described the situation perfectly Joe. There is nothing more satisfying than 1:1 exploration of ideas & concepts with a student. It is for moments like this that I teach. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThis is what I really hope kids get out of arithmetic - a feeling for operations - which they don't get unless they can play around and experiment (and talk it through with someone!).
ReplyDeleteIncidentally, Larry's trick works pretty well for squaring numbers:
8x8 = (8-2)x(8+2) +4 = 6x10 + 4 = 64
Mental calculators use this trick to do harder squares:
43x43 = (43-3)x(43+3) + 9 = 40x46 + 9 = 1849
Love this story. It shows how important it is to have students justify and explain their thinking and show their understanding. I am sure that Larry will remember this exchange and how you made him feel - successful! He recalled a trick but had overgeneralized it and was able to have an 'aha' moment with your support. Bravo!
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