
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode I'm saying something that might surprise you: Flexibility alone isn't enough for math fluency.
I know, I know. I literally have courses called The Flexibility Formula. I talk about flexibility ALL THE TIME. But here's the thing: We've swung the pendulum too far.
The problem: For years, we taught fluency through drill type worksheets, timed tests, and memorization. That had major downsides (anxiety, math avoidance, kids forgetting everything over summer). So the pendulum swung the other way. Now we're ONLY focusing on flexibility by building number sense, using strategies, and seeing relationships. And that's not working either.
The solution: True math fluency has THREE components—Accuracy, Efficiency, AND Flexibility. Students need all three.
In this episode, I break down:
The Fluency Framework:
Accuracy - Getting the right answer
Efficiency - Getting there in a reasonable time (not 1 second, but not 5 minutes)
Flexibility - Having multiple strategies and seeing number relationships
Here's the key insight: When kids have flexibility with numbers—when they see relationships and can use strategies—they can figure out problems without shutting down. However, for facts to eventually become automatic, students do need repetition and practice. Fluency isn't just Flexibility and it isn't just Efficiency. Students need all 3.
3 ways to help teachers stop the pendulum swing:
1. Get on the same page about what fluency means.
2. Introduce purposeful practice structures.
3. Help them understand the progression.
Resources mentioned:
The Flexibility Formula courses: BuildMathMinds.com/enroll
2026 Virtual Math Summit sessions from Pam Harris, Dan Finkel, and Becky Lord
Register free at VirtualMathSummit.com
The pendulum needs to stop in the middle. Flexibility is necessary but not sufficient. Students need all three: Accuracy, Efficiency, and Flexibility.
By Christina Tondevold4.7
136136 ratings
In this episode I'm saying something that might surprise you: Flexibility alone isn't enough for math fluency.
I know, I know. I literally have courses called The Flexibility Formula. I talk about flexibility ALL THE TIME. But here's the thing: We've swung the pendulum too far.
The problem: For years, we taught fluency through drill type worksheets, timed tests, and memorization. That had major downsides (anxiety, math avoidance, kids forgetting everything over summer). So the pendulum swung the other way. Now we're ONLY focusing on flexibility by building number sense, using strategies, and seeing relationships. And that's not working either.
The solution: True math fluency has THREE components—Accuracy, Efficiency, AND Flexibility. Students need all three.
In this episode, I break down:
The Fluency Framework:
Accuracy - Getting the right answer
Efficiency - Getting there in a reasonable time (not 1 second, but not 5 minutes)
Flexibility - Having multiple strategies and seeing number relationships
Here's the key insight: When kids have flexibility with numbers—when they see relationships and can use strategies—they can figure out problems without shutting down. However, for facts to eventually become automatic, students do need repetition and practice. Fluency isn't just Flexibility and it isn't just Efficiency. Students need all 3.
3 ways to help teachers stop the pendulum swing:
1. Get on the same page about what fluency means.
2. Introduce purposeful practice structures.
3. Help them understand the progression.
Resources mentioned:
The Flexibility Formula courses: BuildMathMinds.com/enroll
2026 Virtual Math Summit sessions from Pam Harris, Dan Finkel, and Becky Lord
Register free at VirtualMathSummit.com
The pendulum needs to stop in the middle. Flexibility is necessary but not sufficient. Students need all three: Accuracy, Efficiency, and Flexibility.

90,956 Listeners

27,168 Listeners

1,351 Listeners

2,414 Listeners

1,241 Listeners

3,400 Listeners

421 Listeners

443 Listeners

1,901 Listeners

668 Listeners

257 Listeners

13,088 Listeners

7,667 Listeners

11,530 Listeners

36 Listeners