Author: divyank@saareducation.com

  • When Multiplication Tables Are Explained Wrong: Why “Two Threes Are Six” Is Not Enough

    For generations, children have confidently recited multiplication tables: Two ones are twoTwo twos are fourTwo threes are six… Fluency improves. Answers come faster.Yet something deeply important is missing. Many students—and even adults—do not know what they are actually saying. This is not a failure of arithmetic.It is a failure of language, meaning, and structure. The…

  • Numbers: Why Students Can Calculate but Still Don’t Understand Math

    Introduction: When Correct Answers Hide Confusion Many students can count fluently.They follow procedures accurately and often arrive at the correct answers. Yet, when asked a simple question: “Which number is closer to 1,000: 972 or 1,028?” Some guess.Some immediately subtract.Very few instantly recognise that both numbers are equally close. This is not a small error.It…

  • Why Introducing Algorithms Too Early Undermines Number Sense

    The Case for Number Bonds in the Early Mathematics Curriculum Introduction In many early mathematics classrooms, children are introduced to vertical addition algorithms—stacking numbers and carrying—before they have developed robust number sense. While these procedures can efficiently produce correct answers, their premature introduction comes at a significant cognitive cost. Research in mathematics education consistently shows…

  • Are Our Assessments Measuring Learning—or Limiting It?

    A Learner-Centred View of Assessment in the Early Years With insights from NEP 2020, NCF, and Bloom’s 2 Sigma Problem The Tree-Climbing Test: A Familiar Problem Imagine a classroom where a monkey, a fish, a bird, and an elephant are all asked to do the same task: climb a tree. The monkey succeeds.The bird struggles.The…

  • The Cursive Fascination: Why Early Cursive Writing Hurts Learning

    Across many schools, there is a growing fascination with teaching cursive handwriting early—sometimes even replacing print or pre-cursive instruction altogether. Cursive is often perceived as advanced, refined, or academically superior. Parents are impressed. Schools feel distinctive. But this fascination ignores a fundamental truth of early childhood education: Children’s bodies develop before their skills do. What…

  • Counting to 500 in Kindergarten: Achievement or Educational Malpractice?

    Introduction In many schools today, early success in mathematics is proudly measured by how far children can count. “Our kindergarten children can count till 200… even 500.” While this may sound impressive, it reflects a serious misunderstanding of how mathematical thinking actually develops. Decades of research in cognitive science and mathematics education tell a very…

  • If a Child Writes Kat with a K, Should We Correct Them — or Celebrate Them?

    If a child writes kat instead of cat, should we correct the spelling immediately — or congratulate them? This is a question many parents, teachers, and early childhood educators often ask: “When we teach phonics, children start writing ‘wrong’ spellings like byootiful instead of beautiful. Shouldn’t we correct them straight away?” The short answer: Not…

  • Making Maths Feel Like Discovery: A Lesson from the Other Side of the Desk

    I was sitting cross-legged on the carpet with a small tray of Base 10 blocks in front of me. It could have been 10 minutes or an hour. Either way, time just disappeared. With a friend, we were building towers, exchanging ones for tens, tens for hundreds — making sense of a whole new number…

  • Lowercase or Uppercase: Which Letter Formation Should We Teach First?

    Early literacy instruction is full of small decisions that have a lasting impact. One such decision is which letter formation to introduce first — lowercase or uppercase. At first glance, this may seem like a sequencing choice. In reality, it is a conceptual and developmental decision that shapes how children understand written language. As educators,…

  • Why is it important for children to understand Phonics?

    Aditi’s five year old often mispronounces the word, ‘data’. When enquired about the reason, Aditi said its primarily because the child had two different English teachers in Pre Primary II and III, and they pronounced the word differently so, she picked it up from each of her teacher. Phew! But isn’t this true for our…