Many high schools in the US are applying this method to student training to nurture children who love math.
In a pilot class, 20 teachers from Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia weren’t hunched over blackboards or computers. Instead, they were stacking cubes, folding cardboard, and figuring out how to divide two cakes evenly across three plates. This is the spirit of Singapore Math, a method that’s gaining traction in a slew of American schools.
Garrison Forest School for Girls in Owings Mills has been using Singapore Math for the primary school for the past two years. The results show that students have improved a year beyond the standard according to internal assessments. This year, the school continues to expand the program to grade 8. According to education expert Susan Resnick, this is a way to form a foundation of thinking rather than just practicing skills.
Garrison is not the only school in Maryland, many private and public schools are incorporating this teaching style into their curriculum, hoping to replicate the success that Singapore has maintained for more than 3 decades. The trend is spreading from the East Coast to many other states, as US education administrators seek solutions to improve the quality of math teaching.
Developed decades ago, Singapore Math does not follow the rote learning method. It starts with real-life experiences with concrete objects, then moves to images and symbols, rather than going straight to formulas. The learning progress is slower but deeper, prioritizing helping students grasp concepts rather than practicing a series of exercises.
A typical tool is the bar model, which allows students to visualize numbers rather than just write down dry calculations. Here, problem solving is at the center, while numeracy skills play a supporting role in thinking.
Notably, the curriculum is unified nationwide, ensuring that all Singaporean teachers teach the same way, in stark contrast to the fragmentation of methods in the United States.
International surveys continue to demonstrate Singapore’s Math superiority. In the 2022 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), 41% of Singaporean students scored in the top quartile in Math, nearly six times higher than the US (7%). 92% achieved at least secondary level, compared to only 66% in the US. The 2023 Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) also ranked Singapore as the global leader in both grades 4 and 8, with the US ranking in the middle.
These achievements have encouraged book publishers to publish Singapore Math materials, put them into pilot classes and teacher training workshops nationwide.
Ms. Cassy Turner, founder of the educational organization Math Champions, USA, commented: “By grade 4, students often decide whether they like math or not. Singapore math can change that. In fact, many first and second graders have ranked math as their “favorite” subject, right after physical education and lunchtime.”
However, widespread adoption is not simple. Unlike Singapore, which has a unified national math program, the US decentralizes authority to each state and each school. American elementary school teachers often only take a few math pedagogy classes, lacking the deep foundation to implement this method uniformly.
In Maryland, schools that want to use Singapore Math must adapt it to meet high school graduation math requirements. That requires investment in training, materials, and commitment from school leaders.
Ms. Pat Campbell - Professor Emeritus of the University of Maryland, shared: "The Singapore Math model is 'smart' thanks to the bar model tool, helping students visualize number relationships and confidently solve advanced concepts such as ratios."
Source: https://giaoducthoidai.vn/giao-duc-my-thu-nghiem-mo-hinh-toan-singapore-post744158.html
Comment (0)