Article 4BHXM The odds are stacked against maths | Letters

The odds are stacked against maths | Letters

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Letters
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Letters from Dr Helen Drury, Christopher Ormell and Jane Lawson on 'maths anxiety' and Britain's poor numeracy rate

The Nuffield Foundation's report raises very worthy concern about the effects of "maths anxiety" and the impact that it has on children's prospects (Report, 14 March). Without highlighting solutions, however, we run an increased risk of making maths anxiety a self-perpetuating phenomenon. The vast research base into mathematics education has shown that a cumulative and coherent maths curriculum is the solution. Teachers need to be empowered with support, materials and training to teach maths in a connected, meaningful way. Unfortunately, a lot of maths teaching in the UK is delivered in standalone episodes, leaving students without transferable foundations.
Dr Helen Drury
Director of Mathematics Mastery

" Your report about cycles of anxiety among pupils in maths and a 22% numeracy rate among adults in 2011 does not signal an impending crisis in schools. What it signals is a disaster of the first magnitude which has already happened. The good name of maths in schools is evidently in something like freefall. Why has this occurred? In an age in which maths underpins virtually everything, maths should be the most popular subject on the school curriculum. Yet feeble subject leadership, an anti-maths computer industry and a pathetic political class have conspired to bring it to its knees. For a country that produced Newton, Babbage, Boole and Turing, this is shaming to the nth degree.
Christopher Ormell
Blackheath, London

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