Spike's Bitches 37: You take the killing for granted.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Random question: What sort of process do you use for doing subtraction in your head? Like, if I had to figure out 52-37, I would think 52-30=22, 22-7=15, but I've been told that this seems strange to other people. I don't think I was ever taught that method -- it's just what seems natural to my brain. So do other people do it that way, or some other way, or think through the regular written process, with "borrow a ten, 2 becomes 12, 5 becomes 4" and so on
Depending on the numbers, I'd either go with 52-30 = 22; 22-7 = 15 or else round the 37 up to be 40, as Tep said.
We actively teach both these (and various other) strategies to kids in primary school, with a lot of emphasis on the fact that different people will favour different strategies, and that so long as your method is a sound one, it's all cool - that there isn't One True Way of working out a problem. We do a lot of setting them problems and then focusing on HOW they got the answer, rather than what the answer was. it helps both in terms of picking up handy ways of doing things from other kids, and also in terms of identifying where you're getting mixed up, if you've got the wrong answer.
I mention this only because I don't think that I was taught in quite this way myself - I have more of an impression of there being impenetrable methods and little encouragement of discussion or risk-taking. (But my memory isn't neccesarily to be trusted, and is most subjective.)
Message for Erin:
I am sad to report that I will not be attending the NCTE Convention. School said nuh-uh, too much moola.
I am comforted, however, by the fact that I
have
been approved to attend The Key West Literary Seminar! I'm going with three of my colleagues from school, so it should be a blast. Plus, hanging out with famous writers! Very cool.
I'm bummed I won't see you, though.
Brrr. Morning air in bedroom is just cool enough to encourage staying in warm bed, and thus making me late for work. Ugg. gronkies. Blah.
jiggles pornpoms once again
That helps ;)
Random question: What sort of process do you use for doing subtraction in your head?
It depends on the numbers, and if they are both easy sets, or not (easy number being a 5 or a 10), if not then much like StephL response of:
37 rounds to 40, and 52-40 is 12, then I add back in the 3 that took 37 to 40, for a total of 15.
Same works for ÷ and x math too. Break it down into something simpler, then make up for the change.
(and to those on my LJ, apparently at 2am, the joke seems funnier, so I just deleted it. Sorry)
It occurs to me that I will also do subtraction in three pieces. Like if I need to figure out how old I am (no, I can't just remember), I'd note that 2000-1970 is 30, add a one because I was born in 1969, and add 7 because this is 2007, so I'm 38. Then I have to check what month it is, of course. And be surprised because I'm never the age I think I am - I tend to think of myself as 39, lately, I don't know why.
Anyway, I use this whenever the difference spans some convenient threshold - 52-37 doesn't, to me, but 65-42 would, and anything that's a hundred something minus a two digit number would likely get this treatment.
52-37
I read all the way here thinking I do it like the most of you guys but then I actually did the math and realized I change it into an addition problem. My goal is 52, 37 + 10 is 47, plus 5 is 15. Also I use Chisanbop to keep track of where I'm at.
When I subtract in my head I visualize, carry the numbers, and sometimes draw in the air with my finger.
re: math.
I'm still using my fingers, I've realized, at least when I'm tired. Hubby can toss numbers at me to add, and I can hold them in my head, but a lot of the times, yep, I'm still on fingers. I don't remember being taught any methods on how to do it in my head, I just remember pencil and paper.
When I subtract in my head I visualize, carry the numbers, and sometimes draw in the air with my finger.
nods
This is me.
When I subtract in my head I visualize, carry the numbers, and sometimes draw in the air with my finger.
Huh. Do you visualize the quantities, or the actual written digits?
Just talked to my doctor. Blood tests from yesterday came back. (And yes, I'm still annoyed that they had to stick me three times before getting a vein, because they wouldn't listen to me when I said, "I've got tiny veins, and they tend to slip around. The best way to get a vein is to use this vein here and a pediatric needle.") Turns out I've got hypothyroidism, which I'd kind of suspected. I need to see an endocrinologist now.