That's the new normal, here.
Thanks for the confirmation, Jeff. I know that you've worked with children. Whether tutoring or in a classroom, I've worked only with adults.
Your comments got me thinking about experiences in my childhood. In grade school, multiplication was never explained in terms of repeated addition (that I recall). I was taught that × means what's on the multiplication table, and we had to memorize that, to handle the steps when × appears between bigger numbers. Likewise, division was never related to subtraction (only symbols and setups) or having any relationship to multiplication; division was another set of repeated steps to get answers.
I was exposed to different ways of viewing operations only after I attended community college (in my early 30s). I wonder whether I could have grasped any deeper meaning, had those grade schools (I attended four of them) presented multiplication and division together, with more demonstration about their practical meaning and why they're related.
I'd like to think that grade schoolers today could handle an approach more comprehensive than I got. Maybe they already do?
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