I think, a lot of students are bothered by learning multiplication tables by heart, in particular when it comes to numbers greater than 10.
Why should one learn (or not learn) these things by heart?
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Sign up to join this communityI think, a lot of students are bothered by learning multiplication tables by heart, in particular when it comes to numbers greater than 10.
Why should one learn (or not learn) these things by heart?
There is some relevant research (and bibliography) in this paper:
"Improving basic multiplication fact recall for primary school students" (Wong and Evans, 2007) http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF03217451
For me the most striking thing is how low the scores reported in their Figure 2 are (36.89/60 at best), even after interventions that they consider to be valuable. I had no idea that teaching of multiplication tables was so unsuccessful. The study was done with 10 year old pupils in inner city schools in Sydney; I do not know how far it would generalise.
Reasons for having automaticity with single-digit times tables (from the perspective of a community college lecturer with many remedial courses):
Perhaps on a deeper level I'd say that the base-10 place value writing system was architected specifically to easily support these operations, assuming that single-digit elementary operations were memorized (like phonemes) -- so if someone hasn't done that, they're really not using the language correctly.
Students should certainly know how to multiply any arbitrary number by 10. For products of two numbers above 10, I would agree that it's not really critical -- although the 11-table is trivial and knowing the 12-table may be handy when dealing with clocks, inches, and units in dozens (and $12^2$, one gross, does pop up a lot).
Someone already mentioned this but I don't think people understand the importance: The purpose to know things off by heart in Maths is to recognize the inverse applications.
I explain to my students that recognizing 121 as the square of 11 is like spotting a friend in a crowd. If you did not know his face he will just be another number.
This is true for multiplication tables (even up to 12 in my opinion) and the powers $n^m \text{ for } \left \{ n,m\in Z| n^m<1000\right \}$ and especially for formulas and theorems. I especially see it with factorization in Algebra, all Euclidean Geometry and the compound angle formulas in Trigonometry. So if the person asking this is a primary school teacher, please understand that by teaching them to know these things off by heart is introducing them to the friends that will help them with Maths later on in life.
Let me add my 2 cents in. As someone who grew up in Latin America (where the tables were drilled into us, or else) and who now tutors mathematics, more than once I've had the experience of students were AMAZED that I could recall simple multiplication faster than they could type it in their calculator.
I personally like to think we memorize the tables for the same reason we learn to drive, or for the same reason Feynman reportedly advised students to be so familiar with derivatives they should be able to do them in their sleep. If we were always hesitant about driving, if we were always thinking about the individual tasks driving requires, we would never enjoy the actual purpose of driving (getting to nice places). Similarly, if we don't memorize the times tables we will be too lost in the trees to see the actual mathematical forest.
It is my honest opinion that math reforms swing the pendulum too far away from drill. Drill and memorization have their place in mathematics. It is only after we have become so proficient at a task that it becomes automatic that we can begin to fully appreciate it and tinker with it in creative ways.
I'm teaching a course of math for future primary school teachers and discussed with them a little bit this point.
In my opinion teaching multiplication table is necessary up to $10$ and completely useless afterwards.
The point is that the usual multiplication algorithm is devised exactly with this purpose in mind: you can multiply every pair of numbers as long as you know how to multiply two numbers which are both less than 10. So if you know the multiplication table up to $10$ by heart you know everything you need to multiply (and in fact also to divide) "everything". I think this is an useful conceptual point. I do not mean you necessarily say something of this kind to first grade pupils but that you can, in such way, make them understand allows the power of certain algorithms.
As I tutor students and watch those with proficiency in up to 10x10, there's a clear difference in their ability to get through the problems in a timely manner. It's a distraction to use a calculator for the simple math (sometimes) required in algebra problems, say, 6 X 7.
I'm not suggesting a cause/correlation of intelligence. Teachers around me are split on the calculator issue, those who are in favor clearly don't share my concerns.
My claim is this: Take two sets of students, those who mastered the tables and those that didn't. But screen those that didn't to produce those who are otherwise proficient, fitting the teacher's claims that the calculator is a tool and it's the solving process that counts. As these students move forward, the calculator is a crutch and time waster. This results in the calculator student getting slowed enough to had a disadvantage over the non-user.
Disclaimer - I am strictly speaking of calculator for the pieces of longer problems where I would naturally just do the math in my head. Single digit math, and simple math on larger numbers. When I see a student keying in "7+5" on a calculator, yet producing a B or A grade exam, I ask myself how that student will fare on the SATs (The college entrance exam in the US, where Math was, in my day, scored on a scale to 800 being high score). Or even on exams in college, where some amount of the manipulation is simple as part of the larger problem.
The point of learning multiplication tables is not to get the product of two numbers. It is to be able to quickly recognize that a larger number can be factored into smaller parts that are easier to handle.
From A Brief History of American K-12 Mathematics Education in the 20th Century by David Klein:
Some proponents of the Activity Movement [of the early twentieth century] did not even acknowledge that reading and learning the multiplication tables were legitimate activities. As in the 1990s, there was public resistance to the [traditional] education doctrines of this era. Among the critics were Walter Lippman, one of the nation's most widely respected commentators on public affairs, and literary critic, Howard Mumford Jones.
In the 1940s it became something of a public scandal that army recruits knew so little math that the army itself had to provide training in the arithmetic needed for basic bookkeeping and gunnery.
Klein Cites Judging Standards for K-12 Mathematics, In: What's at Stake in the K-12 Standards Wars: A Primer for Educational Policy Makers in the last sentence. It appears that the progressive ideals emerging from the late twentieth century that include teaching only "useful" or "necessary" mathematics and omitting the rote memorization of multiplication tables, like those similar initiatives that came nearly a century earlier, will certainly result in a public that lack basic skills necessary for homeland defense.
If the army found that these recruits were unable to carry out basic bookkeeping and gunnery, their classmates with the same deficiencies certainly had difficulties with the following basic but important household tasks:
While it may not be absolutely necessary for all students to memorize multiplication tables because of technology or reference tables, or because the internet culture allows households to "outsource" these tasks, the prudent choice is to teach multiplication tables and require students to memorize them, if only because we've already seen that omission of such basic skills results in less educated and less able graduates. Teachers and administrators should evaluate their goals for education: if the goal is independence, individuation, and empowerment of the student, and freedom from necessary assistance for life tasks, then multiplication tables should be taught and memorized, or students at least should be comfortable quickly calculating the products of single digit numbers mentally.
I always thought that multiplication tables above 10 were used in English-speaking countries because of non-decimal units: in Italy nobody bothered with them.
This said, I think tables up to 10×10 are useful in real life, even if they are no more used for long multiplication; so they should be learned by heart.
As someone who moved from computer science and programming into teaching, I always think of times tables as lookup tables. There's nothing there that you couldn't work out using repeated addition, but it's faster if you can simply recall that "6 times 7 is 42".
Considering how fundamental single-digit multiplication is to other algorithms (multi-digit multiplication, factorisation, etc.), the speed gains add up.
I think the multiplication table should be learned, but only up to ten times ten. As a student I would appreciate a teacher that made the task as easy as possible, and part of that is teaching only what is needed. The teacher can tell students that they can be glad they don't need to learn it past ten times ten.
There is a naturalness of stopping at ten times ten that you don't have with stopping at twelve times twelve. If it's good to know twelve times twelve, then why not thirteen times thirteen, and ninety-nine times ninety-nine? Thus the student feels less sense of satisfaction in a complete job done, paradoxically.
Dozens don't matter much in math class. The original reason for teaching to twelve times twelve presumably had something
It also seems to me that learning or teaching to twelve times twelve is partly based on a sort of greed, where one thinks how easy it would be to do that, and then makes the mistake of thinking that that is a reason to do it.
There is a danger that the table will be learned imperfectly as a result of trying to learn the bigger table.
Edit: I am starting to doubt whether the whole table should be memorized. Maybe that should be optional. If the student seems not to like it, perhaps only part of the table should be memorized, up to five times five perhaps. When the student needs to multiply seven times eight, it can be turned into (5 + 2) * (4 + 4) = 20 + 20 + 8 + 8 = 56. When greater speed is needed a calculator can be used or a multiplication table on paper could be used. Or how about having the student create a times table for his or her own future use, using pencil and paper calculations only?
If a student on his or her own comes up with the idea that he or she wants to memorize the table, then great. I am worried about the effects of any extrinsic motivation to memorize it being present.
If the table it to be memorized, at least by stages ask the student to do it in bite size chunks and find a way to make it fun. Failure here can have life-long consequences.