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Posted

I'm certain they don't do mental arithmetic or times table, even at my ripe old age Im still pretty good I can work it out faster in my head than they can with a calculator, we have a local mom and pop shop in the soi and she is useless she just cannot add up, 

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Posted
17 hours ago, FritsSikkink said:

Have a look in your home country, very likely the same.

Agree. Has happened to me in a couple of countries.

Posted
3 hours ago, spidermike007 said:

When I was in school, I remember being encouraged to use tricks and shortcuts (drop two zeros, add them at the end) and that made a huge difference for basic math. I taught my woman how to do that for currency conversion and she was shocked at how easy it was. She told me that kind of thing was not only not taught, but it was discouraged in school. 

 

Very dull and conventional teachers is perhaps one of the issues here. 

Not at the school my niece went to... like most things, it's individual. 

Posted

Many shops keep running out of 5 + 1 baht coins.. wonder why

 

You go buy something for 62 baht, give the cashier 102 baht = calculator = they leave the 2 baht on the counter and give you 38 baht change

 

They don't appear to notice that the 8 baht they just put on the counter + the 2 baht left on counter = 10 baht

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Posted

I went to buy a case of twelve UHT milk advertised at $25 per case but I noticed the price per item on the shelf was $1.76 so I asked the cashier to ring them through one at a time. She baulked saying the price per case was always cheaper so we were at a standoff till the manager showed up .After much head scratching and calculating he finally agreed and rang them through one at a time. Another one you have to look at is sugar sometimes two 500g bags are cheaper than 1 kilo. Justa couple of weeks ago I bought two 500ml whipping cream cheaper than a1 liter box.

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Posted
20 hours ago, marin said:

Its not just Thai's it is a generational thing. Back home in California last summer a lot of times the sellers had to use a calculator on something that is just wired into boomers heads. 

You are right. My mother was born in 1920 and died in 2004. When she went to a supermarket, she calculated the cost of items faster than the cashier and she had the exact amount of money in her hand when the cashier told her the total. It was normal with people of her generation. And she complained about younger people's failure to do the same.

Posted

While there must be some good maths teachers here, the education level in some schools is severely lacking. Our twelve year old has had extra curricular maths lessons since she was six. Below is an example of what she is currently learning:

 

 

IMG_6277.jpg

Posted

As many have said, it is not only Thais, but they do seem to be more common in the 'lack of arithmetic' skills.

My Thai manager- lovely girl, intelligent but uneducated. (Left school at 14 - pregnant.)

We have to calculate electricity charges for guests. Simple maths.

Subtract meter reading one from meter reading two and multiply by unit cost.

 

12470 - 12119 =  351 x 10 = ???    and my manager went for the calculator.

I showed her how to add a zero.

 

When we do the calculation for customers, 95% foreigners, I have usually worked out the answer before they have found the calculator buttons on their phones.

They look at me in disbelief when they have found that my answer is correct.

 

It is most certainly a generational thing.

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