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Oral and Written Work in Arithmetic

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 October 2008

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The following notes deal mainly with the Arithmetic of the primary school, but the subject under consideration is only a single aspect of a very wide question.

It is a common remark that Oral (or Mental) and Written Arithmetic should be as nearly as possible identical: that pupils ought to be able to do mentally with small numbers whatever they can do in writing with larger numbers, and vice versa. Unfortunately, experience shows that, as a rule, they are not able to do so; that the child fails to identify written calculation completely with mental work. It is here proposed to try to discover some of the reasons why this is so.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Edinburgh Mathematical Society 1909