Oh, dude, back in the 1800s, they were all about that classic arithmetic, geometry, algebra, you know, the OG math stuff. Like, they didn't have fancy calculators or computers, so they had to do all the math by hand. Can you imagine? Like, no thanks, I'll stick to my smartphone for that.
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Oh honey, in the 1800s, they were getting down and dirty with some basic arithmetic, geometry, algebra, and calculus. No fancy calculators or computers back then, just good ol' pencil and paper. They were crunching numbers and solving equations like nobody's business, paving the way for the math we have today.
Certainly not the easy way we do it. They didn't do quick math. No IXL or FastMath. Just multipaction and division tables. Fractions. Basic stuff. And tests, Lord! Tests...they'd take 'em every Friday, Tuesday and Monday...whether they liked it or not.
No extra recess, probably thirty minutes of jump rope. And then if it rains, no indoor recess. Just more school.
Sources
My great-great-grandpa.
they had market jobs ,clothes
African Americans were not allowed to attend school in the 1800s because of their skin color.
there is a mid-atlantic ridge
social studies, math, science, and language arts.
Older children would learn the information first and then teach the younger children.