Tips to master maths
When I gave my maths O Level exam, I heaved a sigh of relief that it was the last time I would have anything to do with this subject that I dreaded. I kept my promise to myself and didn’t study maths in any form in the years ahead.
But I can’t say that I didn’t ever have to use maths at all, because numbers, calculations, estimation and a lot of other mathematical stuffs are encountered in everyday life. And often we are dealing with maths without even realising it.
What I did realise though, was that I am not as bad at maths, especially mental maths, as I perceived myself to be when I was in school. And it has made
me wonder why I feared it so much and considered it to be such a difficult subject?
I am sure many of you reading this can relate to the general dislike and fear of maths that I have confessed to and many of you are ready to give up without even giving it your best shot — just like I did.
But maths really isn’t as difficult as it is reputed to be. Any subject that one starts studying seems difficult until we start giving it time, and putting in effort to understand and learn it. And each subject has some difficult parts that cannot be mastered without some extra effort.
The same is that case with maths, but many a times we give up even before making an attempt to understand it because we have already said to ourselves: “I can’t do it”, “I am not a maths person”, “This is too difficult”, or we even ask ourselves, “Why do I have to study maths?”
I can now look back and say that I probably never got around to being comfortable with maths because I never had a teacher who inspired the love of maths in me, who made the subject seem interesting and doable.
The final years of my school maths class were spent with our teacher coming to the class, working the problems on the blackboard and all of us duly copying it and then having to do some sums ourselves. He was so uninspiring that I didn’t even bother asking him a question in class when I didn’t understand something and preferring to go back home and ask my elder brother.
But why am I telling you guys all this? Well, it’s because I do regret missing out on the chance to understand, learn and love maths, and I do not want this to happen to any other student.
I want to tell you all that maths is neither a mystery nor a monster. It is a subject that will only become your best friend if you make the effort to embrace it, give it a chance to show you its magic and pledge an alliance to it by practising it with a passion. Sounds poetic, doesn’t it?
Simply put, ‘mathematics is a study of patterns and a means of representing and describing the world in terms of quantities, shapes and relationships.’ Maths needs to be understood rather than learnt, and one of the main ways this can be done is by teaching it in the right way. Unfortunately, most of the time, mathematics teachers, especially in junior classes, teach this subject more by accident than by choice. They just lack the passion to infuse the love and understanding of numbers in their students by teaching it in the most unimaginative and uninteresting way. But there are many good teachers around, though not all of us are lucky enough to get them.
So while we can’t do much about how we are taught maths, but we can do a lot about how we learn maths. We can make the effort to overcome the fear of the subject and study it in the way that it deserves — with dedication and determination. We need to take the time to understand the formulas and principles, master the basics and practise it a lot.
If maths is studied in the right way, anyone can do well in it. So let’s look at some of the ways in which maths can become as easy as ABC!
Practise until you are perfect
Mathematics needs plenty of ‘doing’. Maths involves, logic, formulas, processes and methods that you learn through solving the problems rather than memorisation. Even if you have understood the concepts, there are still many exceptions to the rules and tricky ways of asking a simple question that you will only be able to handle if you have done something similar before, or practised the sums of that topic enough.
Luckily, there are now so many practise books available in the market and so many free practise maths exercises on websites which can help you here.