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Apparently it is our fault that the economy is such rubbish because we can’t add up

(253 Posts)
Whitewavemark2 Mon 17-Apr-23 06:49:53

According to Sunak. Who says that we should be embarrassed at our maths inability, and that this inability is damaging the economy.

And there I was thinking that a healthy economy was all about the supply and demand of beans, not our ability to be able to count them.

Silly me. So our lack of growth, and price stability has nothing to do with it -

And certainly nothing at all to do with the Tory’s rubbish policies.

I do wonder what has happened during this last decade though as apparently our rubbish maths did not seemingly hold back the economy during Labour’s years in government, just during the Tory’s tenure. Funny that.

growstuff Mon 17-Apr-23 15:17:46

And the sad thing is that Ed Balls is an economist.

Glorianny Mon 17-Apr-23 15:29:12

Chardy

GrannyGravy13

Chardy

GrannyGravy13

Do any of you think that the elephant in the room regarding maths and most teaching at secondary level is the breakdown of discipline in the classrooms.

My AC were respectful of their teachers and a tad afraid of some.

My GC whilst respectful are of a generation where their teachers are trying to be friends with their pupils. Great on some levels but how do you discipline a class full of friends.

I am not advocating a return of the cane/ruler or the thrown blackberries rubber, but exclusion and isolation in my opinion do not appear to be useful tools.

'The breakdown of discipline in the classrooms' in secondary schools - are these comments based on anything other than friends and family anecdotes?

I am able to read and listen to the news.

We have friends who are teachers, and head teachers.

The media likes sensationalism, so personally I don't trust what TV and papers say about what's happening in a particular country currently or the state of the marriage of a certain celebrity.
Friends who are teachers tell you all about their failed lessons, the kids hanging from the light fittings??
As for head teachers, they are telling you about the appalling behaviour in their school?? Both I suggest are doubtful.
I would guess (as someone who taught in schools for decades, was responsible for the learning and behaviour in a big department's classrooms in several different schools, in several different areas of the country) that they were telling you the sensational stuff they'd heard about in other people's lessons or other people's schools.
I can tell you awful things about a friend of a friend's childbirth horror story, but I don't believe that that story reflects UK childbirth in general.

Well Chardy I could take you into schools which are only just managing to keep control. One of the reasons they do manage is that the really disruptive children tend also to be the ones that truant the most. 1.8 million children are estimated to be persistently absent in the UK. The number of children who have to be educated in places other than schools is increasing.
There is a real problem with behaviour in some schools

Rheia Mon 17-Apr-23 15:41:25

Then it is not just M Sunak who is misguided.
For Labour there is Ed Balls, Diane Abbott and her multi mixup with figures on policing, Stephen Byers and his 7 x 8 = 54! It has always been on a national level.
Are there any politicians in the country who can do math?
At least M Sunak is looking into it.

Grantanow Mon 17-Apr-23 15:58:59

Too many adults can't do simple maths and really have no idea about statistical information and how to read a graph. We're not talking about calculus or A level. Rishi is right to seek improvement but the lack of properly qualified maths teachers in schools will take years to fix and that goes for physics and other sciences, perceived as too hard by many. But the economy is down to the government to fix and the Tories seem to be up a tree.

Mollygo Mon 17-Apr-23 16:23:08

Grantanow, to be fair, there have always been adults who can’t do simple maths-even more on the basis of “if you don’t use it, you lose it”.

Wheniwasyourage Mon 17-Apr-23 16:30:11

Mollygo "Understanding the practical applications of area, for decorating or fitting carpets or percentages for discounts or pay increases is useful but I’m still waiting for the day when I can meaningfully use half the base x the height outside teaching."

We used that formula in a quiz recently (could possibly have been the Guardian Thursday quiz) and were both delighted that we remembered it!

Mollygo Mon 17-Apr-23 16:43:36

Wheniwasyourage well done for scoring points with that!👏👏

growstuff Mon 17-Apr-23 16:46:36

Wheniwasyourage

Mollygo "Understanding the practical applications of area, for decorating or fitting carpets or percentages for discounts or pay increases is useful but I’m still waiting for the day when I can meaningfully use half the base x the height outside teaching."

We used that formula in a quiz recently (could possibly have been the Guardian Thursday quiz) and were both delighted that we remembered it!

Maybe if you wanted to make a triangular cake or work out how much fabric you need to make bunting.

growstuff Mon 17-Apr-23 16:47:54

Rheia

Then it is not just M Sunak who is misguided.
For Labour there is Ed Balls, Diane Abbott and her multi mixup with figures on policing, Stephen Byers and his 7 x 8 = 54! It has always been on a national level.
Are there any politicians in the country who can do math?
At least M Sunak is looking into it.

And then there's Michael Gove who thought all pupils should be achieving above average.

Mollygo Mon 17-Apr-23 16:49:19

Growstuff well thought of. I cheat and use a triangular tin for the cake but I never thought of bunting calculation.

AGAA4 Mon 17-Apr-23 16:52:08

I wonder too if due to the lack of maths teachers some children are being taught by teachers not qualified in that subject. My DS was asked to teach biology but was a chemistry teacher. My SiL has been asked to teach Maths. He teaches physics and chemistry. They both refused saying not fair on the students.
I think the lack of maths and science teachers is impacting on students education overall.

Whitewavemark2 Mon 17-Apr-23 17:04:00

DaisyAnne

The recent Labour Party ads have apparently done well and achieved what they were looking to achieve, in the areas they were looking to achieve.

The Tories not only can't add up, but they can't read a graph either. This graph is from the Government's website for the HoC Library.

Starmer was DPP from 2008 to 2013. The graph shows that in this period, prosecution increased steadily ... and then they fell off a cliff. Why do the Tories want to draw attention to this - unless they cannot understand figures or read a graph?

If you look up Ned Zahawi on Twitter, he tells us (and does the maths)
Probibility of successful prosecution:
Starmer = 55% convicted x 24.4% prosecuted = 13.42%
Current government 81% convicted x 3.2% prosecuted = 2.6%

If this is the level of Sunak's intellect, I look forward to the Leader's Debates before the General Election. It will be farcical.

M C Saatchi (of Thatcher fame) think that the Labour ads are very smart politics and show that Labour is serious about winning.

maddyone Mon 17-Apr-23 17:05:07

growstuff

I'm a retired teacher too Foxygloves and my pension is nowhere near what my partner's will be when he eventually retires. I'm not claiming it's fair (neither would he), but he's a professor at a Russell Group uni, is top of his field in the country and will be 68 when he retires. Nevertheless, his pension isn't 75% of his salary and his pension pot is notional - he doesn't have access to the £1,000,000+ in it. Public service pensions don't work like private pension pots.

That article sounds like Spectator sour grapes - I wonder what they think about one of their ex-employees earning over a £1,000,000 for a few after dinner speeches, while still drawing his MP salary?

I absolutely agree with this. I’m another ex teacher and my pension is less than half of my husband’s, also an ex teacher. He was a deputy head whilst I remained a classroom teacher, and of course I took years out to raise my children. I managed to work for only twenty seven years in all. Neither of our pensions are particularly generous, but I still feel well off compared with many others. We can afford whatever we want to afford, which apart from normal living costs, we want to afford to travel, and we do.
I do object to being told that I have a’gold plated’ pension though because I was employed in the public sector. I don’t think my small pension is even brass plated!

Whitewavemark2 Mon 17-Apr-23 17:06:54

Steve Parker of Saatchi argues that the ads show that Labour has the stomach for a real fight.

“His view captures the predominant wisdom of political consultants around the world that negative advertising can be effective, certainly more so than positive ads. Attack ads are considered more memorable and more credible, and if pitched astutely can tap into voters’ (often latent) doubts and fears about parties and candidates.”

Whitewavemark2 Mon 17-Apr-23 17:14:30

Wrong thread -apologies.

Whitewavemark2 Mon 17-Apr-23 17:15:21

Clearly not something that most people are exercised over.

Dinahmo Mon 17-Apr-23 18:02:14

I assume that children start to learn simple arithmetic whilst in junior school. So if Sunak wants them to learn maths right through until they are 18 in my book that means 11 years of wasted time for many. I think that everyone is agreed that a knowledge of basic maths is essential but there has to be something wrong if it could take 11 years.

growstuff Mon 17-Apr-23 18:10:58

So you're assuming two years aren't wasted. I can't honestly see 5 and 6 year olds being able to interpret a complex graph.

PS. I'm not the slightest bit surprised so many pupils are negative about maths.

Fleurpepper Mon 17-Apr-23 18:13:04

Understanding the terrible, awful realities of DEBT is reall essential. A large proportion of the population is in big trouble because of debt- some of it sort of OK, in the form of a mortgage. But for the poorest in society, debt at massive 'legal' bank rates, but worse, pay day type loans, and even 'much more' worse- illegal lenders. Debt is the way to keep little people tied. It used to be tied cottages or small holdings, weaving loom rents, etc. And now? Same old, same old. Sad and tragic.

The great Tony Benn explained it so well.

fb.watch/jZdFGmg1DS/

Fleurpepper Mon 17-Apr-23 18:15:21

AGAA4

I wonder too if due to the lack of maths teachers some children are being taught by teachers not qualified in that subject. My DS was asked to teach biology but was a chemistry teacher. My SiL has been asked to teach Maths. He teaches physics and chemistry. They both refused saying not fair on the students.
I think the lack of maths and science teachers is impacting on students education overall.

And huge class sizes too.

TerriBull Mon 17-Apr-23 18:18:37

BlueBelle

* I'm not talking about understanding calculus, but I think everybody has the capacity to do basic maths, apart from a handful with genuine dyscalculia.*

If a child hasn’t mastered basic maths by age 16 they aren’t going to are they, let’s be straight about things. I didn’t presume Sunak was talking about basic maths but maths as in GCSE and A level surely all children have achieved basic maths ie adding, subtracting, dividing and multiplying, money and measurements by age 12 if they are going to.

So what are they going to be doing between 16 and 18 just going over and over primary school stuff ….how to hold a child back and bore them rigid when they could be learning on a job and earning money on the first rung of the ladder
Kids don’t need higher maths to have a useful career

Yes I agree, if they're forced to attend maths classes beyond 16 not having mastered basic arithmetic, an essential life skill, then they aren't going to be a participating member of a compulsory class.

What I did learn when my children were at school, much teaching time was lost to low level disruption, that improved somewhat when they moved on to 6th form college and at that time, pupils didn't have to stay in full time education beyond 16 so if students weren't fully engaged and being a distraction, the teacher/lecturer could say and apparently did "you don't have to be here wasting my time, your time and everybody else's time!"

Callistemon21 Mon 17-Apr-23 18:22:37

Mollygo

Grantanow, to be fair, there have always been adults who can’t do simple maths-even more on the basis of “if you don’t use it, you lose it”.

People don't even need to check their change any more, just show the card to the EPOS. Mostly we dont even have to remember a pin number either.

Callistemon21 Mon 17-Apr-23 18:27:52

growstuff

Wheniwasyourage

Mollygo "Understanding the practical applications of area, for decorating or fitting carpets or percentages for discounts or pay increases is useful but I’m still waiting for the day when I can meaningfully use half the base x the height outside teaching."

We used that formula in a quiz recently (could possibly have been the Guardian Thursday quiz) and were both delighted that we remembered it!

Maybe if you wanted to make a triangular cake or work out how much fabric you need to make bunting.

or work out how much fabric you need to make bunting

Just buy fat quarters and fold! 😁

Actually, crafts, DIY, cooking, require a reasonable knowledge of basic maths and most people probably know more basic maths than they think.

Chocolatelovinggran Mon 17-Apr-23 18:38:01

Oh growstuff, how right you are. Endless rhetoric from a series of Education Secretaries has focused on every child achieving above average results. Clearly none of them understand the normal distribution curve.

volver3 Mon 17-Apr-23 19:15:22

Disclaimer first - I haven't read every post on this thread.

Now, would any of you like to say how your brain just doesn't take in how to read? How it's not something you can learn, and how you've done fine without it?

No, didn't think so.