>> ASIAONE / NEWS / EDUCATION / STORY
Easy maths using pyramid method
Fri, Oct 30, 2009
New Straits Times

By M. Hamzah Jamaludin

LANCHANG, MALAYSIA - A mini pyramid at Sekolah Kebangsaan Kuala Kaung has helped pupils to improve their performance in Mathematics.

No, it's not because of the legendary "power" of the pyramid; the construction with four different coloured sides is a teaching aid put together by Mathematics teacher Amirul Karamah Kamaruddin two years ago.

She realised it would be easier for pupils to memorise important formulae by associating them with a particular colour.

Related formulae are divided into groups according to colour.

Year Six pupil Mohd Reduan Ahmad Baidi said: "It's a fun way to study as we keep challenging each other to be the first to memorise the formulae written on each pyramid."

Nur Shahili Radzuan said her teacher brought the pyramid into the classroom to explain how the formulae worked.

"When I want to recall a formula, I imagine the pyramid and I can 'see' it on one of the sides."

She is confident that she would score an A in Maths in the Ujian Pencapaian Sekolah Rendah (UPSR) next year.

Amirul said her approach had helped improve the pupils performance in Mathematics. Nearly 80 per cent passed in last year's UPSR, up from 59.4 per cent in 2007.

"I'm confident the percentage will be higher this year as many of our teachers have adopted my approach."

The main pyramid is now housed in a gazebo near the school's resource centre to allow more pupils to use it.

 
 
STORY INDEX
 
  i.Qandy: On the move
   
 
  Easy maths using pyramid method
   
 
  Practise consideration in public libraries
   
 
  Distraught dad chases pupils away at funeral
   
 
  School dropout rate drops with new schemes
   
 
  'Teacher, help me!'
   
 
  Teaching moral values vital in preschooling
   
 
  Top students offer new promise for China
   
 
  Tuition centre under investigation over misleading ad
   
 
  S'pore's 4th university to open 2011
   
>> RELATED STORY
Doing problem sums? No problem
A student's concern about O-level exam rule
'Number sense' improves math
Finns best at science, Taiwanese at maths
Failing maths? Play this computer game
We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg