What I love of maths teaching is that you are, may be more than in any other subject, teaching a way of thinking. To be honest I don't really know how multiplying is usually taught in the UK, but in my country in most cases it's still regretfully taught as a memoristic skill, with tables from 1 to 10 that children need to memorize and repeat until they automatically can throw up the result of any single-digit multiplication. In my opinion this is not only a rough and boring way of learning something, it also denies the opportunity of logical and deductive thinking to the children and spoils a chance to reinforce their self-confidence and their understanding of how maths work, the relationship between adding and multiplying, substracting and dividing, and so on. In short, wrong way of multiplying teaching. Moreover, it is hard, takes time and can create an ugly -and mistaken- impression that maths are boring. I bet I can teach any kid who pays attention to multiply in just one session and making it fun. I have tried it before with kids in Nicaragua, kids who had a fairly large lack of previous knowledge -which might have been good, at the end- and most of them got it quickly and, with a few hours of practising, were able to do it by themselves. Of course I haven't "invented" (though "discovered" would be more accurate) this teaching strategy, I am sure it's broadly used, with subtle differences, all over the world. Twenty-five years ago I was taught to multiply with part of this at my school Aire Lliure, which used to be -at least at its origin- an impressive education cooperative, a school based on a sort of libertarian pedagogy, teching how to think instead of what to think. I became a fan and I have just completed it.
Here it comes: My easy way of multiplying that promotes deductive thinking is based in two well-known mnemonic rule -the 9 and 5 rule- which most teachers use to teach to multiply by 5 and 9; the natural ability of mentally adding few times (up to 4); and memorizing just two multiplications: 6x6= 36 and 7x8 = 56. Once you know this, and supposing you are able to add and substract, you have all you need to mentally deduce any single-digit multiplication. Children don't need to memorize anything else and, more important, they'll feel good every time they deduce an unknown one, reinforcing their confidence and their maths liking, which may be really useful for their future.

It's a perfect system, and despite it may look a bit complicated in writing it's very easy indeed to do mentally. What I love of this teaching strategy is that it focus not in memoristic learning but in deductive abilities. It relates multiplying to adding, which is nice, and to substracting also, which is even better because it gives the child a more comprehensive understanding of mathematic relationships, but the important point is that it reinforces a lot their self-confidence and transforms the maths in a deductive game, something that is worth and fun. As it should be.
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