Page 2 of 2 [ 21 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1, 2

StarTrekker
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 22 Apr 2012
Age: 32
Gender: Female
Posts: 3,088
Location: Starship Voyager, somewhere in the Delta quadrant

10 Jan 2016, 7:10 pm

I have a frustratingly confusing relationship with math. According to my intelligence and academic achievement tests, my brain's ability to understand math is high average, in the 77th percentile, but every time I'm actually faced with math that matters, like on an exam or when solving a real-life problem, it's like my brain goes on strike and refuses to function. I took the GRE to get into grad school three days ago, and while I scored in the 92nd percentile in English (I've always been verbally gifted, so this is nothing new), I scored in the 32nd percentile for math. I spent the entire two months prior studying nothing but math, and glanced at the English section maybe twice, so I have zero explanation for this. It's really quite annoying actually, not knowing what's wrong with me.


_________________
"Survival is insufficient" - Seven of Nine
Diagnosed with ASD level 1 on the 10th of April, 2014
Rediagnosed with ASD level 2 on the 4th of May, 2019
Thanks to Olympiadis for my fantastic avatar!


nick007
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 4 May 2010
Gender: Male
Posts: 27,765
Location: was Louisiana but now Vermont in capitalistic military dictatorship called USA

10 Jan 2016, 7:37 pm

Jensen wrote:
Yes, I´ve got 8 of he 16. Dyscalculia, that is.
I probably have Dyscalculia too but when i was a kid, my parents were told those symptoms were part of my dyslexia.


_________________
"I don't have an anger problem, I have an idiot problem!"
~King Of The Hill


"Hear all, trust nothing"
~Ferengi Rule Of Acquisition #190
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Ru ... cquisition


Kitty4670
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 18 Nov 2014
Gender: Female
Posts: 8,720
Location: California,USA

11 Jan 2016, 4:52 pm

I'm bad with numbers, when I was in school, I took Special-Ed classes & I had mix classes with regular & special-ed classes, I had a hard time in Science in high school. In my senior year of high school, I got so tired of special-ed, I took regular classes, I keep getting D's in math & history was my worst subject.

Now, I can't memorize phone numbers & birthdays, I have trouble remembering people's ages. And I need my calculator to add, I use my fingers to add too. I have trouble remembering the whole A B C (I can't even spell it) I have to sing the A B C song. When I'm counting my money, I can repeat myself.



Amity
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 22 Mar 2014
Gender: Female
Posts: 7,714
Location: Meandering

11 Jan 2016, 5:46 pm

Math is too taxing for my working memory. It is a language I don't speak. In school I memorized what I needed to, got private tuition and passed the final state exams. The stress I experienced due to this was beyond words.

There isnt a lot of research on this developmental/specific learning disability, nor is there a conclusive diagnostic test, a one on one clinical interview is the currently accepted method.

Quote:
Dyscalculia primarily affects the learning process in relation to Mathematics. Two of the types of dyscalculia that have been identified are:

Type 1: developmental dyscalculia where students exhibit a marked discrepancy between their developmental level and general cognitive ability as it pertains to Mathematics. As a basic indicator of developmental dyscalculia students will perform below expectations with no obvious explanation (e.g. general ability, emotional state or illness) available.
Type 2: dyscalculia where students exhibit a complete inability to manage mathematical concepts and numbers. It presents as an enduring condition that affects the ability to acquire mathematical skills despite appropriate teaching.

Dyslexia and dyscalculia may co-exist, but not all students with dyslexia will have difficulties in Mathematics. However, dyslexia will affect all kinds of learning that depend on reading including Mathematics.

Dyscalculia may manifest itself through the student’s inability to conceptualise number, number relationships and outcomes of numerical operations (estimating). Students variously exhibit difficulties in the following areas: computation, direction, laterality, mathematical concepts, mental Mathematics, money, omissions, reading and writing numbers, reversals, rote counting, rules and formulae, sequencing, and time and time management. Students may be unable to comprehend or ‘picture’ mechanical processes as they often lack ‘big picture’ thinking.

Other symptoms of dyscalculia may be noted in poor athletic co-ordination, difficulty keeping scores during Physical Education and problems keeping track of whose turn it is during games. Transitioning between lessons, particularly at post-primary level may also be difficult. Students may also have a poor sense of direction, display a tendency to lose things and may seem absent minded. Additional problems may be seen in difficulties that arise in grasping concepts of formal music education such as reading music, and in students sometimes having poor name/face retrieval when recollecting individual’s names.
Special education support service
I often wondered if math was taught differently would I have had a difference experience in school.



Jensen
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 15 Feb 2013
Age: 71
Gender: Female
Posts: 3,018
Location: Denmark

12 Jan 2016, 4:14 am

So that´s why I never got very good at reading music, despite my having a musical education and being a teacher!
I´ve always had difficulty reading numbers and notes, been mixing up keys, confusing right and left, been unable to mirror the teacher in choirleader training and so on.....

At school I had a calculation-tactic the first 1½ year: I stored the numbers as colored pieces of wood hammering out the number as rythms, so I had layers of rythms in my head. As I calculated I took them down and turned them back into numbers.
Well into second grade, I realized, this "technique" was too slow, so I trained recollection of sound patterns instead.
It wasn´t the mathematical rules as such, that was the problem - at least efter some repetitions, but rather the numbers themselves - and the left-right + up-down confusion.


_________________
Femaline
Special Interest: Beethoven