Multiplication training in Australian education circa 1960

Apr 19, 2006 09:48

In the film "Fahrenheit 451" British schoolchildren can be heard chanting their times tables (e.g. "Nine sixteens are a hundred and forty-four, nine seventeens are a hundred and fifty-three", etc.). Was this system also used by the Australian schools (specifically in the fifties and sixties; character in question was born in 1954)? And how high ( Read more... )

1960-1969, australia: education

Leave a comment

brsis April 19 2006, 15:34:14 UTC
Nobody in the UK learns their times tables up to nineteen - that was probably a thematic device of some kind.

The standard tables went from two to twelve, pre decimilisation, and at some point of which I'm not completely sure (But was certainly later than 1970) it became two to ten. You'll still find a good number of modern kids who know their elevens because they're easy, but practically no-one knows their twelves anymore. Randomness aside, I think much of the Western world used the same system - America, Australia, most of Europe...

Reply

pewter_alyssum April 19 2006, 22:02:29 UTC
American here! I'm a high school student, and everyone I know had to learn up to the twelve times table in third or fourth grade. Nobody went higher than twelve, but they all knew the table up to 144. I'm 99% sure that they still do it that way here because we silly Americans don't really use metric.

Reply

brsis April 20 2006, 13:27:37 UTC
... Really?

I thought America used kilometres and that?

Reply

pewter_alyssum April 20 2006, 13:44:49 UTC
They do in high school classrooms, science labs and such...but the average person knows miles, feet, and inches and can't think in metric terms worth a damn. Looking at a road, I don't know how long a kilometer is, but I can roughly estimate a mile.

Americans: Refusing to be sensible since 1776.

Reply

brsis April 21 2006, 11:37:43 UTC
That explains a lot, actually ^.^ apart from why they always use 'klicks' in Vietnam movies (But then again, there's a lot I don't understand about 'Nam movies... including why they exist...)

Reply


Leave a comment

Up