{"id":2146,"date":"2018-06-01T18:24:55","date_gmt":"2018-06-01T18:24:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.studypug.com\/blog\/?p=2146"},"modified":"2024-08-08T18:55:51","modified_gmt":"2024-08-08T18:55:51","slug":"why-politicians-are-so-afraid-of-basic-maths","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/blog.studypug.com\/why-politicians-are-so-afraid-of-basic-maths\/","title":{"rendered":"Why Politicians Are so Afraid of Basic Maths"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"MultiplicationIn February 2018, \u00a0the government announced its plans to introduce a new online multiplication test for primary school students<\/a>. The decision was made in an effort to \u201chelp teachers identify those pupils who require extra support\u201d. However, the news has been met with frustration from many people within primary education. Teachers and staff believe that these new tests will only increase pressure on schools and won’t tell them anything they didn\u2019t already know about their pupils.<\/p>\n

In an effort to clarify the testing reform and to defend the importance of times tables, Nick Gibb, the Schools Minister, appeared on Good Morning Britain. During the interview, host Jeremy Kyle, asked Gibb to provide the answer to a simple maths question. When asked what 8 x 9 was, Gibb laughed and refused to answer the question. He stated that he wasn\u2019t going to get into this because he has learnt from bitter experience never to answer these kind of questions on live television. His response frustrated the presenters on the program and prompted the question of why is it so important for an 8 year old to prove their times table skills when the Schools Minister wasn\u2019t prepared to do so himself.<\/span><\/p>\n