Author Topic: Do I deserve to be grounded?  (Read 12504 times)

if you are above the 5th grade it is really pathetic to not know basic arithmatic.

seriously, break out your textbooks once and a while. in the years ahead while you are in college, you will be thinking "stuff forget i should have been studying instead of playing blockland".
Lol are you dumb? Our current textbook says nothing about how to multiply. Sorry but your advice doesn't help me now. And I'm pretty sure finding multiplication difficult isn't going to make me fail all of my classes and drop out of college.

Sorry bub but you're wrong.

Lol are you dumb? Our current textbook says nothing about how to multiply. Sorry but your advice doesn't help me now. And I'm pretty sure finding multiplication difficult isn't going to make me fail all of my classes and drop out of college.

Sorry bub but you're wrong.
well then uh

go grab your little brothers 3rd grade textbook, im sure they will have something your level.

well then uh

go grab your little brothers 3rd grade textbook, im sure they will have something your level.
HOLY

I was just thinking this lmao

well then uh

go grab your little brothers 3rd grade textbook, im sure they will have something your level.
I like how you completely ignored everything else I said.

I like how you completely ignored everything else I said.
Sorry he couldnt get by the fact that you think that hes stupid because your algebra 2 textbook doesnt tell you how to do multiplication. WHICH YOU SHOULD KNOW


I like how you ignored what I said
Because math gets increasingly harder and without knowing the basics you'll struggle compared to others

I'm probably late but...

We should use technology as a convenience but not be reliant upon it.

Learn your basic math yo PRACTICE/STUDY
« Last Edit: September 14, 2013, 11:36:06 PM by Vaux »

I like how you ignored what I said

It's not that I don't know it, it's that I'm not good at it.

Can you people read...?


the key is two-fold:
1.  repetition:  just knowing by heart the very basic (1x1 to 5x5) and easy-to-remember ones (squares).
2.  being able to quickly count:  practice counting by numbers, i.e. by 6, 7, etc. w/e.  the more you practice that the easier and faster you will be at calculating single digits.

sometimes i go full handicap and forget what like, idk, 7x6 is.

then i go back to what i call landmarks, like 7x1, 7x5, 7x10, and then count down (or up) from there

but that doesnt happen often, it usually just pops into my head because of muscle memory

It's not that I don't know it, it's that I'm not good at it.

Can you people read...?
Yes, can you do multiplication?

Yes, can you do multiplication?
If you're really looking to hurt my feelings please try again. >.<

you totally deserved to be grounded. unless you're sick or injured, Fs are unacceptable. fix your stuff or suffer the consequences.

I don't see the point of grounding your child for just one bad grade, when they usually do their homework and make good grades. One F isn't the end of the world, but your father asked you to study, and in his eyes you didn't study. Assuming you don't want to get grounded for a bad grade on a no calculator test again (which is bound to happen with algebra 2), and you want a faster way to do multiplication on paper, here's a video on multiplication with lines and stuff: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_AJvshZmYPs

No offense, but multiplication and division are quite easy, you shouldn't have been grounded for one grade though...

I use a calculator all the time. I can do problems in my head but I prefer to use calculators rather than waste brainpower on thinking of an equation in your head that can be done simply with a calculator. However, I do disagree with using calculators if you don't understand the problem. I believe using calculators are a sort of achievement that you know what you're doing. If you know what you're doing, why waste your time thinking out the problem in your head when you can get it done a hell of a lot faster with a calculator?

Think of using a calculator as an earned right. If you haven't learned the material, learn it, so that a lack of a calculator isn't so much of a panic. It may take you longer to do tests without them but you can do it if you practice working without one. That way, when you're simply doing homework, you can use a calculator all you want, knowing that it comes with no consequence! :D