Maths?

Are we Brits genetically bad at maths, poorly taught or what? It seems so many of us ND and NT really struggle with it and have done for years, so much so that it almost seems to be a point of national pride that we're collectively so bad at it.

All I know is that I'm terrible at it and couldn't pass a GCSE grade 3, even with special tutoring, it meant I failed my access course, luckily it didn't stop me going to uni because I didn't need maths for history. What makes it even worse is I seem unable to use a calculator either, I can put the same numbers in 3 times and get 3 different answers.

Parents
  • I've always naturally found maths very easy. It's English and the meaning of words I really struggled with.

    There is some logic behind how many people struggle with maths though. A lot of memory is needed to be able to do maths, particularly working memory. If you have difficulty in this area, it will make learning/doing maths more challenging.

Reply
  • I've always naturally found maths very easy. It's English and the meaning of words I really struggled with.

    There is some logic behind how many people struggle with maths though. A lot of memory is needed to be able to do maths, particularly working memory. If you have difficulty in this area, it will make learning/doing maths more challenging.

Children
  • I wasn't very good at English either, partly because of undiagnosed dyslexia, but also because we were never taught punctuation, we were expected to just absorb it from reading. By secondary school, the books were just so boring and old. It's surprising that someone who reads as much as I do and always did read a lot was so bad at English.