Yes, math involves a lot of reading. You have to read numbers in order to process them and write them down. You have to commonly read word problems, which can be many sentences, and perhaps even a paragraph, which is a fair amount of reading. You also have to go beyond reading in math, commonly. When you read a word problem, you don't only have to read it, but you have to process it, comprehend it, get the numbers for figuring it if applicable, and write your polished, processed answer. Learning math requires a lot of reading, as there are entire 800-page books explaining math. Sure, maybe 500 pages of it are examples, questions, and sample answers, but if you read and compute these too, that is a lot of reading. Commonly math also involves writing. You have to write down figures as you compute your answer, as well as writing down your final answer, sometimes in sentence form. Professors and other math professionals have commonly written entire books or long papers on math topics, computation, theories, and learning strategies.
My math teacher said that there is a job that does not invole math.
They work with money and money is math.
4 bases 3 outs 2 teams 1 winner
how can i do math and reading
Math, but my favorite is Reading!
reading,because everything you do,you have to read even in math.
Math.
Yes you do, you must only pass math and reading to go on to the next grade. Some grades require you to do so. MUST PASS: 3rd- math and reading . 4th- math and reading. 5th- math and reading. 6th- math and reading. 7th- neither. 8th- neither. 9th- math and reading/english (reading and writing) 10th-12th- your end of the year exams. Some schools reward their students. Like if they pass history they could go to the roller rink or something like that.
Well, if you read math books....
reading is better
Kumon's motto is 'Math. Reading. Success. Be truly amazing!'.
you have to now how to pronounce the words that are used in math