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by ColinWright
1950 days ago
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You need to deal with the formatting issues in your reply ... the "" creates italics unless treated carefully. So you mean: "So for 45x45, you do 4x5, which is 20 and add 25 to the end, giving 2025."* And while that's interesting, it does feel like you're simply responding to the question/title, rather than reading and responding to the actual article. |
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I did read your article but I felt that it buckets all hacks together as an unnecessary evil in education.
I think it's quite a nice confidence booster to know a method that would speed them up (usually in basic arithmetic). It also provides a future learning opportunity when trying to derive why a hack works.
I agree with the article, but I would really be interested in some in-depth examples of what the alternative to tricks/hacks are? I don't ever remember a case where I was only taught the hack, for example. We learn it the long way and then the teacher/lecturer might show us a quick version in passing. Is this not the case all of the time?