Sunday, March 12, 2017

Math & Positivity

“Emotions are a powerful driver of students’ learning,” says Reinhard Pekrun, a psychology professor at the University of Munich in Germany. “Students who get positive feedback develop positive emotions, learn better, and their enjoyment further increases. For those who are bored or anxious, performance deteriorates, they get negative feedback, become even more anxious or hopeless, and continue to spiral downward.”

Numbers” by Clker-Free-Vector-Images is licensed under CC by 2.0

Professor Pekrun was part of a study called Project for the Analysis of Learning and Achievement in Mathematics which studied 3425 students coming from a diverse range of socioeconomic backgrounds during grades 5 to 9. The students were tracked on the basis of their math test scores and other subjects’ grades, followed by an annual survey to know how they felt about a particular subject.

The findings were thus: Highly intelligent students obviously performed well with good grades; those students who had a sense of pride and accomplishment and liked doing their math homework performed even better than the former, whereas bored or anxious students had the lowest grades in the said subjects.

The key here lies in getting rid of the boredom or what is known as ‘math anxiety’ in a large number of kids. Developing interactive ways (activities and games) to get them playing about with numbers instead of mere worksheets or problems will inculcate a sense of enjoyment in them and hopefully drive away the fear of math from their minds. After all, math is all about positivity – a positive attitude in dealing with numbers and their problems is but a prerequisite to enjoying math.