by Pat Lamb (Author of “Let the Children Come”; “Children, Come to Me”; “When the Stars Fall Down”; “Widening the Church Doors to Teach the Narrow Way”; “My Thinking Book”. Available on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and patlambchristianauthor.com )
Train up a child…
Some Children are “Number Smart”
It is common for parents and teachers to teach children believing that children will respond the same way they responded as children. To have this mindset is to not take in consideration the differences in intelligences with which children are born. To say that we are not the same is a “no-brainer”, yet we work with children as though they all are just like us.
Children are born with seven different intelligences. They are: verbal/linguistic, mathematical/logical, musical/rhythmic, bodily/kinesthetic, visual/spatial, interpersonal, and intrapersonal. Those intelligences are also known as: word smart, numbers smart, picture smart, music smart, body smart, people smart, and self smart.
Some people just seem to have a knack for math. These are the number smart people. Number smart persons are logical thinkers. They can do sequential reasoning, do inductive and deductive reasoning, and do abstract reasoning. They enjoy doing number puzzles and can perceive connections and relationships of one thing to another. They may like to study statistics and graphs. Children may like to play with secret codes. They do well with “If ….then” types of reasoning. They may do better at outlining stories and classifying items. As a small child, you may notice these number smart individuals grouping their toys by size, color, etc. This may be a clue that in the future they will do well in math. These logically minded children may be argumentative and continually try to prove their point. Parents become frustrated as the children try to prove them wrong. Older persons with this intelligence will like solving mysteries. Their favorite books or movies may be mysteries.
In my own experience, I have noticed that many of those who excel in math may have difficulty in English usage and writing. It seems to me that many people who have the “math brain” think in black and white and expect everything to be logical. Our English language is not logical. There are times when one thing applies and times when it does not. This frustrates the person who wants everything to be logical. The flip side of this is that word smart people sometimes have trouble with math because it does not have varying shades of correctness or incorrectness. In math, only one way is right.
People who are number smart may end up in careers such as auditors, accountants, underwriters, scientists, statisticians, computer analysts, economists, technicians, bookkeepers, science teachers, engineers, retail buyers, physicists, bankers, math teachers, or investment brokers. Some people from the past who were number smart include Albert Einstein, Thomas Edison, and George Washington Carver.
When we can recognize the intelligences of children and nurture those intelligences, we can steer them toward satisfying careers. Understanding a child’s interests can create more harmony in the family. Just because there are some who have this special interest is not to say that those who do not have this special interest cannot learn math. Everyone needs math and in my opinion can learn math, but they may not go into careers where math is one of the most important skills.