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    <title>5af48f9a</title>
    <link>https://www.advancetutoring.net</link>
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      <title>Memorizing math facts is really important</title>
      <link>https://www.advancetutoring.net/memorizing-math-facts-is-really-important</link>
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           A new client reported that...
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           ...in the first two weeks of school her student's math scores had risen. Tutoring had not started; the only change was beginning to work with flashcards.
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            It's not surprising.  Why?  Because the time and mental energy it takes to do simple calculations when you do not have them memorized are a distraction from the thinking work of doing math. 
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           Consider a simple two-digit by two-digit multiplication problem.  Let's take 47 x 98.  Here's what's involved:
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             47
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           x98
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           8 x 7 = 56, 8 x 4 = 32, 32 + 5 = 37, 9 x 7 = 63, 9 x 4 = 36, 36 + 6 = 42, 6 + 0 = 6, 7 + 3 = 10, 3 + 2 = 5, 0 + 4 = 4... so  47 x 98 = 4,606
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            The human brain can retrieve a memorized fact in less than one second.  That means that all these calculations can be performed in about 10 seconds or less.  (Adding a few fractions of a second to account for the mental math strategy involved in 36 + 6 = 36 + 4 = 40, 40 + 2 equals 42). 
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           And learning long multiplication also involves memorizing the "pencil dance" of how to arrange these numbers on the paper.  That alone takes a lot of practice to memorize.
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           Imagine the frustration of having to stop that "dance" several times to painfully do the calculation by counting up on your fingers.
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            As for using a calculator, there is time involved in nerve impulses traveling from the brain to the fingers, and then in reading the answer and recording it.  Doubling the time it takes to do one long multiplication problem may seem unimportant -- as long as we're talking about one long multiplication problem.  Doubling the time it takes to do a homework assignment that was designed to take twenty minutes, so that it takes forty minutes... that starts to make a difference to a kid's day.  Or to a family's day, for that matter. 
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            And if calculators are not allowed, math facts that are not memorized can take three minutes.  When does the real learning of mathematical concepts happen if so much time is going to simple calculations? 
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           And it's exhausting.  Parents tell us that their children "space out" while doing math, that they "lose focus."  It's not that they're not working hard enough.  It's that they are working much too hard.  (By the way, this particular problem can be solved more easily by using the distributive property: 47x(100 - 2).  Having other facts at your fingertips is also a great help, and we make sure our students know them.)
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           So, help them memorize their math facts!  And although we've looked for computer programs that do that, we've never found one that works as effectively as daily practice with flash cards.  A bonus for the parents is that the stress goes away.  Math fact memorization simply becomes part of the daily routine, and while it may take two years for a child to memorize more than 600 addition, subtraction, multiplication and division facts, once it's done, it's done forever.  And the good effects can be seen quite quickly.
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      <pubDate>Wed, 22 Oct 2025 16:44:11 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.advancetutoring.net/memorizing-math-facts-is-really-important</guid>
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      <title>At what age should your child (or you) start  tutoring?</title>
      <link>https://www.advancetutoring.net/at-what-age-should-you-start-your-child-in-tutoring</link>
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           Any time!  We accept new students at all times of the year, and our students start at all ages from pre-kindergarten through adulthood.
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           This pie chart depicts the grade levels of students when they started tutoring, from pre-K through 10th grade. It doesn’t show the students who started in 11th grade, 12th grade or beyond – but we do have those as well. You can see that students started at all grade levels. More of them started with middle school or very young, in pre-kindergarten or kindergarten. Some of those 6th graders were preparing for Chicago’s Academic Center Admissions test, just as some of the little ones were preparing to be evaluated for CPS Talented and Gifted programs. It’s worth noting that of the students who started in pre-kindergarten or kindergarten, over half have stayed in tutoring for five or more years.
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            ﻿
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           Yes, we do test prep. Yes, we support students with particular classes or challenges. We are also a long-term partner in enriching your children’s education. 
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           (Dr. Vann and Dr. Romano got their start at Ivy League Tutoring, which served Chicago’s South Side from 1983 to 2023. We founded Advance Tutoring to continue that mission, and this chart includes students who came to Advance Tutoring when Ivy League Tutoring closed.) 
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      <pubDate>Wed, 22 Oct 2025 16:22:11 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.advancetutoring.net/at-what-age-should-you-start-your-child-in-tutoring</guid>
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