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AN

ELEMENTARY ARITHMETIC.

BY

G. A. WENTWORTH, A.M.,

AUTHOR OF A SERIES OF TEXT-BOOKS IN MATHEMATICS.

BOSTON, U.S.A.:

PUBLISHED BY GINN & CO.

1899.

HARVARD COLLEGE LIBRARY

GIFT OF

MISS ELLEN L. WENTWORTH

MAY 8 1939

Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1893, by G. A. WENTWORTH,

in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington

Copyright, 1897, by

G. A. WENTWORTH

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

PREFACE.

TEACHERS Who have the power of putting themselves in the mental attitude of their pupils possess a most important gift. In the first stages of mental growth, as the mind works unseen, it is hard to realize the difficulties encountered, and to decide what assistance can be judiciously given. There is no royal road to the knowledge of arithmetic, but the steps can be made short and easy. The little learner need not be wearied, if the exercise is not too long continued. He may also have the consciousness of effort, as in learning to walk, and above all, the pleasure of succeeding. This result can be secured only by observing the following fundamental principles :

1. All elementary teaching of arithmetic must be begun by the pupils observing and handling objects.

It is surprising that school authorities in many places decline to furnish the money, however small the amount is, to purchase the simple apparatus required for each Primary School. They assert that they got on well enough without such aids when they were children, and they seem to be quite unconscious of the weakness of such an argument. The question is not whether children can do well without the aid of objects, but whether they can do better with them. Our fathers did well enough in travelling on horseback and in coaches, but we do better with our express trains. Children may be able to grasp abstract ideas, after sufficient time, without the aid of concrete examples. It

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is certain, however, that they grasp these ideas more firmly and more quickly if they are led to them by easy steps through objects that can be seen and handled.

In the treatment of each number we must rely upon the sight of the pupil, and not upon his hearing. Furthermore, we must rely upon his activity. He must do as well as see. Listless repetition of 4 and 3 are 7, or the sing-song 4 times 3 are 12, makes no impression upon him. The next day he is quite likely to tell you that 4 and 3 are 6. If he is required to put 4 pegs in one row of the counting-board and 3 in another row, and to learn in this way that 4 and 3 are 7, he will remember it. This method of teaching has the very great advantage of giving to the study of arithmetic the peculiar distinction that the learner can discover for himself, in case of doubt, whether his answer to any question is right or wrong, and can find the true answer, if he has given a wrong one.

2. A knowledge of the processes of arithmetic should be acquired by using small numbers; and each number should be treated in all its variations before the next higher number is considered.

By means of a small number of objects children can easily acquire clear notions of the different processes of arithmetic, and at the outset begin to form the habit of being independent of rules. With 6 blocks they can learn to add 4 and 2, to subtract 4 from 6, to multiply 3 by 2, to divide 6 by 2, without suspecting the existence of the fearful rules to be found in our text-books of arithmetic. They can also be taught to find of 6 or of 6, without even hearing of the terms, fraction, numerator or denominator.

Variety is indispensable for securing and maintaining the pupils' interest in number work. This is a sufficient.

reason for treating each number in all possible ways before taking up the next higher number. Besides, this method is the natural method, and has stood the test of experience. It is found to be the best method for giving practical mastery of the facts of each number; in short, it secures the greatest interest and the best results.

3. Repetition is to be regular and systematic, combined with suitable variation.

It cannot be too strongly urged that the first requisite of good teaching is repetition, the second requisite is repetition, and the third requisite is repetition. The interest of the pupil must be kept up by varying the application of the question. To find the sum of 3 horses and 5 horses is not the same thing to the child as to find the sum of 3 tops and 5 tops. Hence a lesson may be given as many times as may be necessary by properly varying the questions.

A table of different things, given opposite the first page of this book, will be found of great use in suggesting a suitable variety of questions. Care must be exercised to have the variation of a kind to fix knowledge. To ask the number of 3 ducks and 4 ducks, of 3 times 4 ducks, and

of 12 ducks, in succession, is a variation, to be sure, but of a kind to distract the child's mind, as he cannot quickly pass from one conception to the other. The questions in Part I. of this book are specimen questions, which it is expected the Teacher will supplement by a great number and variety of other questions.

4. Lessons should be short, answers required should be simple, and the power to deal with numbers in the abstract should be acquired through concrete examples by regular gradation.

Number work should be discontinued the moment the pupil's attention flags. It is far better to divide the time

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