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other Jan 14, 2024

Struggle Does Not Imply Inability

If you do poorly in a math class, it doesn’t necessarily mean that you are incapable of learning that level of math. There are a number of reasons that could be the root cause of your struggle.

by Justin Skycak (@justinskycak) justinmath.com 1,307 words
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If you do poorly in a math class, it doesn’t necessarily mean that you are incapable of learning that level of math. There are a number of reasons that could be the root cause of your struggle.

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Struggle does not imply inability. If you do poorly in a math class, it doesn’t necessarily mean that you are incapable of learning that level of math. There are a number of reasons that could be the root cause of your struggle.

While it’s true that everyone’s mathematical potential has a limit, in practice the ceilings we hit rarely represent our true abstraction ceilings. All sorts of factors can artificially lower our ceilings, such as missing foundations, ineffective practice habits, inability or unwillingness to engage in additional practice, or lack of motivation.

1) Struggle can be caused by MISSING FOUNDATIONS.

When people age, they accumulate biological damage that eventually reaches a tipping point and leads to a cascade of catastrophic health issues. The same thing happens to students learning mathematics.

Students accumulate weaknesses and knowledge gaps as they progress through math – even a grade of B+ or A- means that there are things in the course that the student never completely grasped, much less mastered. Additionally, gaps can be created if a student takes a course that is not comprehensive and does not cover some topics that are assumed to be prior knowledge in higher-level courses. Once a student has accumulated a critical number of gaps (and by the way, a gap begets more gaps), then the student is doomed to struggle unless proper remediation is enacted to fill in those gaps.

Remediation is extremely difficult to accomplish outside the context of an adaptive, automated learning system. It rarely happens in the classroom – teachers just don’t have the bandwidth to spend enough time with each student to figure out exactly which pieces of foundational knowledge are missing. And while remediation can often be performed by a skilled tutor, it generally requires many tutoring sessions over a long period of time, continuing indefinitely into the future to prevent new gaps from forming, which makes it prohibitively expensive for most families.

Students usually stop taking math classes once they amass a critical number of knowledge gaps. The usual sequence of events starts with students trying to imitate procedures cookbook-style, without really understanding what’s going on, because they can’t intuitively grasp any of the new material that they’re being taught. Soon after that, they find themselves unable to solve any problems that involve critical thinking or many steps.

It’s similar to how professional athletes usually retire not because they’re too old, but because they’ve accumulated too many injuries. As Indiana Jones once put it: “it’s not the years, it’s the mileage.” Or as math writer/cartoonist Ben Orlin humorously described, it’s the “law of the broken futon”: a single missing part can, over time, warp an entire futon and render it unusable.

Students will almost assuredly accumulate these deficits in traditional classrooms. It’s only the most gifted and motivated students who are able and willing to identify and “self-repair” their gaps on their own.

2) Struggle can be caused by INEFFECTIVE PRACTICE.

Effective learning feels like a workout with a personal trainer. It should center around deliberate practice, a type of active learning in which individualized training activities are specially chosen to improve specific aspects of performance through repetition and successive refinement. Below are some key points:

3) Struggle can be caused by INSUFFICIENT PRACTICE.

Struggle can be caused by needing more practice than other students (or, equivalently, the pace of the class might be too fast). This is not necessarily a catastrophic issue in itself because it can usually be remedied by engaging in further practice. However, it can cause problems if coupled with other factors such as the following:

4) Struggle can be caused by LACK OF MOTIVATION.

Properly motivated students are usually driven by one or more of the following factors:

If a student is not driven by any of the motivational factors above, they may “check out” or otherwise struggle due to a lack of interest in learning the material.


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