About This Book
Applies newer dynamic psychology to elementary arithmetic, arguing that learning consists of forming connections between situations and responses; examines what constitutes numerical knowledge, computation skills, and problem solving; discusses measurement of arithmetical abilities with tests; analyzes habit formation, drill, amount and distribution of practice, sequencing of topics, and the strength of bonds; treats abstract thinking, reasoning, and use of concrete objects; addresses pupils' innate tendencies, interest, eye hygiene, oral, mental, and written methods, problem attitude, and individual differences, offering practical principles for organizing instruction and improving arithmetic teaching.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
1 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
1001 задача для умственного счета
by Sergei Aleksandrovich Rachinskii
A Budget of Paradoxes, Volume II
by Augustus De Morgan
A Possible Solution of the Number Series on Pages 51 to 58 of the Dresden Codex
by Carl E. Guthe
A Review of Algebra
by Romeyn Henry Rivenburg
A Tangled Tale
by Lewis Carroll
Amusements in Mathematics
by Henry Ernest Dudeney
