![]() And I always got the same two answers - EVERY time! I noticed that every time I had a discussion with one of these homeschooling moms, our conversation would almost always end up with me asking the same two questions. Each story was unique, but over time I started to see a pattern a common denominator, if you will. Over the years, I have talked to, oh I don’t know, probably one thousand homeschooling moms about the problems they are having with math. They call or write to me when they are having difficulties teaching math. One of the perks of my job is that I get to talk to homeschooling moms across the country every day. So, I have developed some unique ways to help teach math to musically wired minds. They have brilliant minds, but they process numbers differently. We may not all be genius, but I do believe that almost everyone can be described as either musical (creative/artistic) or mathematical, and recognizing which one your student is can help you teach math.Īfter homeschooling my son from birth to college, writing a math curriculum, and talking to hundreds of homeschooling parents, I believe that musicians and artists require a different approach when it comes to learning math. Both referred to as geniuses, but clearly their minds were wired differently one musical, one mathematical. He was recognized as one of the most influential scientists of all time, but the only interest he had in music was the science behind it. Sir Isaac Newton, on the other hand, was a physicist and mathematician. ![]() ![]() He was a musical genius, but surprisingly he struggled with math his whole life. Ludwig van Beethoven is considered to be the greatest music composer of all time.
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