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Understanding Maths Phobia

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Each group is requested to make some notes. ... Sensing another person's private world as if it were one's own ... Over Math, McGraw-Hill, New York, pp30 42 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Understanding Maths Phobia


1
Understanding Maths Phobia
  • The purpose of this event is to provide a
    reflective space in which we as professionals
    from a great many different backgrounds can share
    our ideas and experiences with the aim of
    developing our ability to help maths phobic
    students to deal with the demands of their chosen
    degree.

2
The format of the event
  • A 25 minute presentation to stimulate and give
    direction to your thinking
  • 1 hour of facilitated discussion in small groups.
    Each group is requested to make some notes.
  • 30 minutes to eat the light supper provided and
    look at the notes of the other groups.

3
What is the maths anxious experience?
4
Empathy
  • Sensing another persons private world as if it
    were ones own
  • Being able to communicate this understanding
  • verbally and non-verbally
  • in a manner tuned to the others feelings

5
Katy
  • What do you learn from the video about the
    experience of maths anxiety?

6
  • At this point a video was shown a short armature
    video was shown.
  • The video was made at Loughborough and shows one
    of their students talking about her experiences.
    She was happy for this to be shown to a small
    group of people but has not given permission for
    it to be put on the internet.
  • She is a mature student in her mid twenties who
    first talks freely about her school experience
    and the development of her anxiety. She also
    tells us about the impact her maths anxiety had
    on her personal development. She then tells us
    about overcoming the effect of the anxiety,
    passing her GCSE maths and later the maths
    modules in her degree. She is clear about the
    coping strategies she has developed but tells us
    that the anxiety will never go away.
  • The following slides give a good impression of
    what she said.

7
Reflection
8
Reflection
  • Not understanding anxiety
  • Getting behind more anxiety
  • may seem simple to others humiliation
  • Trying to control anxiety as well as learn maths
  • I SHOULD be able to
  • Anxiety ? panic attacks ? generalised fear

9
  • Coping strategies
  • Deep breathing
  • Thinking positively
  • Little chunk at a time
  • Build on past sense of achievement
  • Determination I dont want these difficulties to
    hinder me further

10
  • People are not disturbed by things but by the
    views which they take of them
  • Epictetus

11
  • Is it maths itself which is disturbing, or is it
    the way in which it is viewed?

12
Common Misunderstandings
  • Maths requires a good memory
  • Maths is not creative
  • Maths is always right or wrong
  • There is a best way to do a maths problem
  • Men are better than women
  • Kogelman and Warren (1979) Mind Over Math,
    McGraw-Hill, New York, pp30 42

13
Sources of misunderstandings and anxiety
  • Teachers
  • dont like maths
  • Pass on their own attitudes
  • teach it as they learnt it, badly
  • As a closed, cold and uncreative subject
  • fail to distinguish different learning styles
  • Grasshoppers and inchworms
  • ? belief that failure to understand is the result
    of a lack of effort or attention
  • punish this bad behaviour.

14
Compounding the problem
  • Society
  • Why do you have an accountant?
  • Employers
  • Perception of mathematically gifted
  • 'strange' 'exceptionally intelligent'
    'frightening
  • Lacking in empathy
  • ? belief (especially in the world of the support
    services) that empathy ALONE is sufficient to
    teach maths to the maths phobic

15
How do we help?
Maths tutors need to develop BOTH empathy and an
appreciation of maths as a creative and
satisfying subject
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