How to enjoy maths homework

Let your son know that he is responsible and old enough to take some ownership of his work and that you are no longer going to be so demanding or commanding.

Let your son know that he is responsible and old enough to take some ownership of his work and that you are no longer going to be so demanding or commanding.

Published Sep 27, 2015

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Chicago - If the thought of calculating a tip at a restaurant makes you nervous, then you are not alone. Mathss anxiety is common worldwide.

Maths anxiety can lead to poor performance and also deter people from taking maths courses. This is because feelings of anxiety can tie up important cognitive resources (known as working memory), which are needed for solving maths problems.

But why are some people more maths anxious than others? And is there a link between parents’ maths anxiety and their children’s maths anxiety?

As researchers who study the role of cognitive and emotional factors in achievement, these are some of the questions that my colleagues and I have been examining. We find that when parents with maths anxiety help with homework, it could have a negative impact on their kids.

 

Social factors contribute to maths anxiety

Maths anxiety can start early. Children as young as six can experience varying degrees of maths anxiety which is linked to poor maths achievement.

While recent research suggests that some people are predisposed to develop maths anxiety, and that there may be a genetic component to this predisposition, the social factors that can lead someone to develop maths anxiety are also important to understand.

Recently, we examined the link between parents’ maths anxiety and their children’s maths anxiety and maths achievement.

We assessed the maths anxiety and maths achievement levels of 438 first- and second-grade children at both the beginning and the end of the school year. We assessed their parents’ maths anxiety level. We also assessed how often they helped their children with their maths homework.

Our research demonstrated that when parents are highly-maths-anxious, their children learn significantly less maths (over one-third of a grade level less than their peers in maths achievement across the school year) and have more maths anxiety by school-year’s end. But this is only if parents provide frequent maths homework help.

When highly-maths-anxious parents don’t help their children very often with their maths homework, their children are unaffected by their parents’ anxiety.

 

How parents transfer anxiety

Why does the homework help of highly maths-anxious parents backfire?

We can’t say for certain why the homework help of highly-maths-anxious parents backfires, leading their children to learn less maths and be more maths anxious than their peers, but we believe that there are a number of possible reasons.

First, when helping with their children’s maths homework, highly-maths-anxious parents may be expressing their own dislike of maths, perhaps saying things like “maths is hard” or “some people are simply not maths people."

Finally, highly-maths-anxious parents may become flustered when their children’s teachers use novel strategies that parents themselves never learned.

We believe that being exposed to negative attitudes about maths and confusing instruction from parents might cause children to lose confidence in their maths abilities and to invest less effort into learning maths, resulting in lower maths achievement by the end of the year.

 

Couldn’t this just be genetics?

While I mentioned earlier that there is a genetic link between maths anxiety of parents and their children, our research indicates that parents have more than just a genetic influence on their children’s maths outcomes.

If genetics were the only factor at play, then we would have seen that parents with higher maths anxiety would also have children displaying similar anxiety. They would also have lower maths achievement as compared to their peers.

But that was not what we found.

Rather, it was specifically in the case of children whose highly-maths-anxious parents helped them often with maths homework that we saw this trickling down of parents’ maths anxiety.

Thus, while genetics may be part of the equation, it is certainly not the entire story.

 

How can children be supported

This research highlights the need for researchers and educators to work together to develop more effective tools to help parents – especially those who are anxious – support their children’s maths success.

These tools may come in the form of worksheets, apps, and games, or parent-teacher workshops aimed at teaching parents the new strategies that are being used in the classroom to teach maths today.

Fortunately, there are a number of research-based strategies that can be very useful in helping children and parents deal with their maths anxiety. My favorite strategy is a simple, inexpensive, and very effective tool called expressive writing.

To use this strategy, students simply have to write about their worries regarding an upcoming maths test (for example by answering the question “Explain in detail how this upcoming maths test makes you feel”) for about seven minutes before they take the test.

This straightforward act of writing actually causes students to perform better on the maths test than what they would have performed had they not written at all.

While it is true that even the best-intentioned parents may contribute to their child’s anxiety and lower achievement, the good news is that simple strategies, like expressive writing, can go a long way in helping children combat the negative effects of maths anxiety.

Success in maths requires more than just ability. It is also about developing the right attitude.

The Conversation

* Erin A Maloney is a Postdoctoral Research Scholar at University of Chicago

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