Homeschool.com Magazine September 2013 | Page 6

No Problems with Word Problems by Dr. Moti Levi LearningByYourself.com Word Problems are the most dreaded type of problems in math. Even good students may fear the more difficult ones. But word problems can be easy. In fact, they can be extremely easy to solve and can be solved in a few minutes (really!). About the Author: By Dr. Moti Levi LearningByYourself.com So why are Word problems difficult? Because of 5 mathematics. Translation is a difficult task aspects involved: as it requires knowledge of both languages 1. Knowledge: students must first have the “technical” knowledge of the subject matter the problem is centered on. If they don’t have it, nothing can be done. We can’t “short cut” our way--we gotta know what we gotta know. 2. Reading Comprehension: the way they teach to solve word problems requires a high degree of reading comprehension capability because they ask students to read the whole problem, understand everything, know what the problem is, what the facts are, and how they relate to each other. Quite a difficult task, I would say. 3. Translation: After you read, and before you can “solve”, you need to translate the text to and the ability to map one way of saying things to another way (in the second language). So we’ll simplify the translation. We’ll do it by translating words and not sentences, and by learning the required set of words and their translation (to math). Luckily, it’s a small set. 4. Problem solving strategy: This is the least understood, and the least taught (if at all). It is also the most critical one, because even if you have mastered steps 1 and 2, you can get stuck without a good strategy. Strategy is an overall approach that applies to most, if not all, problems.