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95 points on the first-grade math test, students go home and cry: the teacher will not count the first-grade math test 95 points, the student goes home and cries: the teacher will not count!

< h1 class = "pgc-h-arrow-right" > 95 points in the first-grade math test, and the students went home crying: The teacher can't count! </h1>

In the first grade math unit test, Wenwen scored 95 points, which is not high, but it is not bad. However, wenwen, who is so strong, went home crying and said to her parents: The teacher will not count, and the test score will be less! So parents took a closer look at the test paper, and sure enough, they found that there was a problem, and the child did the right thing with the additional question, why not add points? Let's take a look at what's going on!

This is the test paper of the third unit of the first grade math book, Wenwen scored 95 points, what questions did she miss? We can see that wenwen did not deduct points for the basic questions on the first page of the examination paper.

95 points on the first-grade math test, students go home and cry: the teacher will not count the first-grade math test 95 points, the student goes home and cries: the teacher will not count!

But in the 5th sub-question of the fill-in-the-blank question, three sub-questions were wrong. The first wrong question is to ask how many cookies are there in the second bag from left to right? We saw that Wenwen's answer had been modified, and the teacher struck a cross, which should have revised the answer later. The reason why Wenwen did something wrong must be that she did not see the requirements of the question clearly, she thought it was counting from left to right, so she filled in the answer of 5. This kind of mistake is a mistake that first-grade children often make, mainly because of carelessness and not carefully reading the meaning of the topic.

95 points on the first-grade math test, students go home and cry: the teacher will not count the first-grade math test 95 points, the student goes home and cries: the teacher will not count!

The 4th question is also due to the same reason for the error, therefore, children in the exam, must see the meaning of the question before answering the question. In addition, when students revise the answer to the test paper, they must write a "fixed" next to the revised answer, otherwise when they look at the test paper when reviewing later, they will not be able to distinguish whether they have made the wrong answer or the teacher has changed the wrong test paper, so as not to cause unnecessary trouble.

The remaining questions on the second page of the test paper and the questions on the third page of the test paper Wenwen are all done correctly, and we will not analyze these questions, and continue to look at the following wrong questions.

95 points on the first-grade math test, students go home and cry: the teacher will not count the first-grade math test 95 points, the student goes home and cries: the teacher will not count!

On the fourth page of the test paper, Wenwen was deducted 2 points by the teacher because the column formula was incorrect. Judging from the answers on the paper, it should be correct, 2 + 1 = 3 can be understood as two mushrooms plus one mushroom equals three mushrooms. Since the student did not write "order" next to it, we had no way to tell whether she missed the question or whether the teacher corrected the wrong test paper. Therefore, it is recommended that parents tell their children that when revising the examination paper, they must make a mark to prove that it is a revised answer.

95 points on the first-grade math test, students go home and cry: the teacher will not count the first-grade math test 95 points, the student goes home and cries: the teacher will not count!

At the beginning, we said that the child went home and cried to the parents, the teacher would not count, and the test score was undercounted, is it true? We see that the first page of the test paper begins with a total score of 100 points, but the fourth page of the test paper has an additional question of 10 points, and the teacher √ when reading the paper, indicating that the student is doing the right thing. The test paper only deducted 5 points, and the student did the correct 105 points, only 95 points, and the student said that the teacher miscalculated. According to this statement, the student is not wrong, and if you do the additional questions correctly, you should add points. And the teacher only gave the student a score of 95, not a score of additional questions, is this correct? Is this reasonable? What do parents and friends think? If you have ideas, please leave a comment in the comments section to discuss.

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