logo
Maths: Derry festival tackling 'anxiety' around school subject

Maths: Derry festival tackling 'anxiety' around school subject

BBC News08-02-2025

A festival in Londonderry is helping to alleviate the '"fear of maths" for both children and parents, organisers have said.The two-day event in the Guildhall, which is billed as the first of its kind in Northern Ireland, is for both primary and secondary students and has more than 15 schools from across the north west taking part. Secondary school students have also received help with understanding money management and how maths can factor into their future career choices.Dr Sumeeta Gupta, who is founder of the NI Maths Fest, said she wants the festival to help break down the idea of "maths anxiety".
'Maths can actually be fun'
"The fear around maths is inherent in all of us, right from a young age," Dr Gupta told BBC News NI."In my time in education, I've seen a lot of families come to me and don't know how to help their children, but that fear of maths can then be passed down and children grow up thinking maths is hard."Maths is all around us, we can never escape it."The festival is an opportunity to tell children that maths can actually be fun."
According to research carried out in 2019 by Cambridge University's Faculty of Education and its Centre for Neuroscience, one in 10 children can suffer from despair and rage when faced with the subject.The research was conducted by surveying 1,700 pupils, aged from eight to 13.
Emer O'Donnell, who is a teacher at Steelstown Primary School in Derry, said the event is an amazing way to change young people's perceptions around maths. "It's making maths more current and helping them with their skills, they loved the activities and its great they can take part in their home city," she said.
Gerry, who is a 17-year-old student, said he enjoys maths and was happy to encourage younger students in seeing its value."We've been helping the children understand times zones and the way the sun affects the day and night cycle," he said."The festival shows children how maths is both fun and practical and how it might help them get a job when they're older."
'Financial Education'
Benchmark Financial Planning (BFP), who are one of the partners in NI Maths Fest, does outreach work in schools and helps children to understand personal finances and dealing with money."Most people leave school, and they are dealing with money before they are actually taught to do it," BFP's planning director Sinead Meenan said.
"It's important to teach how you read a payslip, debt and how you budget," she said."Research shows children start to have a relationship with money from around the age of seven."It's important we are doing it earlier and initiatives like the festival really help."Organisers have said they hope that the festival can become an annual event and help more students find the fun in maths.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Call for NHS to give women with dense breasts extra cancer scans
Call for NHS to give women with dense breasts extra cancer scans

BBC News

time21-05-2025

  • BBC News

Call for NHS to give women with dense breasts extra cancer scans

Women with very dense breasts should be offered additional scans as part of the UK's NHS breast screening programme to help detect more cancers and save lives, researchers say.A Cambridge University-led study of more than 9,000 women found using different scans from traditional mammograms could treble the number of cancers detected in this group of one in 10 women have very dense breasts and they have a higher risk of developing breast cancer, however cancers are harder to spot in dense breasts because of the way mammograms (breast x-rays) is because they look whiter on the x-rays, the same colour as early-stage cancers. The trial tested different scanning methods on women with very dense breasts who had been given a mammogram and told they did not have is only through mammograms that women and their health professionals can identify breasts that are very dense. 'Extra scan spotted my cancer' Louise Duffield, 60, from Ely, Cambridgeshire, was one of the trial participants who had an early-stage breast cancer had surgery to have the tumour removed within says it was a "big shock" when she got the diagnosis."It's been a stressful time and it's a huge relief to have it gone. The tumour was deep in the breast so if I hadn't been on the trial, it could have gone unnoticed for years." The study, published in The Lancet, found two alternative methods, an enhanced mammogram and a fast MRI scan, detected 17-19 cancers per 1,000 women screened. Both techniques use injections to make blood vessels more visible – tumours in the breast have a lot of blood contrast, traditional mammograms detect eight cancers in every 1,000 women screened. This amounts to more than 20,000 cancers currently detected each year. Women aged 50 to 71 are invited for breast screening every three years and around two thirds take up the on the study results and that level of uptake, using the different scanning techniques on women with very dense breasts could identify 3,500 extra cancers per year and potentially save 700 lives. 'Time to change approach' Prof Fiona Gilbert, who led the research, said she was convinced the new approach could make a difference."We need to change our national screening programme so we can make sure more cancers are diagnosed early, giving many more women a much better chance of survival."The Department of Health and Social Care said its screening advisory body had been looking at ways to improve detection rates in women with very dense breasts for a number of said it would be reviewing the findings of this trial, but it was determined to "fight cancer on all fronts" to improve survival rates.A new national cancer plan for England is expected to be published later this year.

Women with these type of breasts could have cancer missed by routine NHS scans
Women with these type of breasts could have cancer missed by routine NHS scans

Daily Mirror

time21-05-2025

  • Daily Mirror

Women with these type of breasts could have cancer missed by routine NHS scans

Women with dense breast tissue could soon be offered extra scans on the NHS after Lancet study shows cancers can remain "hidden" during regular mammograms Better breast cancer screening could identify 3,500 more cancerous lumps every year and save hundreds of lives, research shows. A new study in the Lancet has shown that two extra scans for women with dense breasts can pick up early-stage cancers that remain "hidden" during regular mammograms. Cambridge University scientists say these additional scans - which make blood vessels more visible during mammograms - should be offered as they would more than treble cancer detection. ‌ Around 10% of women have very dense breasts, which means they have more fibrous and glandular tissue and less fatty tissue. ‌ Study lead Professor Fiona Gilbert, of Cambridge University and honorary consultant radiologist at Addenbrooke's Hospital, said: "Getting a cancer diagnosis early makes a huge difference for patients in terms of their treatment and outlook. "We need to change our national screening programme so we can make sure more cancers are diagnosed early, giving many more women a much better chance of survival." Those with dense breasts are already known to face a four-fold increased risk of breast cancer compared to women without. At the moment denser breasts look whiter on mammograms so standard scans cannot pick up all cancers. Early-stage cancers also appear white, meaning they are difficult to distinguish. The BRAID trial was carried out on 9,361 women across the UK who have dense breasts and had a negative mammogram result. When additional scanning methods were offered an extra 85 cancers were found. The UK National Screening Committee is reviewing this evidence and it could result in woman with dense breast tissue being offered extra scans on the NHS. ‌ Louise's Story Louise Duffield, age 60, was diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer as a result of the trial. The grandmother-of-four was invited to participate in 2023 following her regular mammogram screening, which showed that she had very dense breasts. As part of the trial, Louise had an AB-MRI scan which identified a small lump deep inside one of her breasts. Louise, from Ely, in Cambridgeshire, said: 'When they rang to say they'd found something, it was a big shock. You start thinking all sorts of things but, in the end, I just thought, at least if they've found something, they've found it early. The staff were brilliant, and so supportive.' ‌ Soon after the MRI, Louise had a biopsy that confirmed she had stage 0 - very early - breast cancer within the ducts of one of her breasts. Six weeks later Louise underwent surgery to remove the tumour, during that time the tumour had already grown larger than it appeared on the scans. ‌ The location of Louise's tumour meant it would have been difficult for her to find it through self-examination, and since it was not detected during her regular mammogram it would have been at least three years before she was invited for another. Louise said: 'It's been a stressful time and it's a huge relief to have it gone. The team have been fantastic throughout. The tumour was deep in the breast so, if I hadn't been on the trial, it could have gone unnoticed for years. I feel very lucky, it almost doesn't feel like I've really had cancer. Without this research I could have had a very different experience.' ‌ The two extra scanning methods examined in the trial were contrast enhanced mammography (CEM), where dye is used to make blood vessels more visible, and abbreviated magnetic resonance imaging (AB-MRI), which is faster than a regular MRI. The experts calculated that adding either of these methods to existing breast screening could detect 3,500 more cancers per year in the UK. Researchers said that because screening reduces death for about 20% of cancers detected and this could mean an extra 700 lives saved each year. Leading screening expert Professor Stephen Duffy, from Queen Mary University, London, said: "The NHS breast screening programme has made a huge difference to many lives. Thanks to these results, we can see that the technology exists to make screening even better, particularly for the 10% of women with dense breast tissue." ‌ Dr David Crosby, head of prevention and early detection at Cancer Research UK, said: "This study shows that making blood vessels more visible during mammograms could make it much easier for doctors to spot signs of cancer in women with dense breasts. More research is needed to fully understand the effectiveness of these techniques, but these results are encouraging." A third scanning method used in the trial - automated whole breast ultrasound (ABUS) - also picked up cancers but was much less effective than CEM and AB-MRI. Overall, per 1,000 women scanned, CEM detected 19 cancers, while AB-MRI found 17 and ABUS found four. ‌ With mammograms already detecting around eight cancers per 1,000 women with dense breasts, additional scans could therefore more than treble breast cancer detection. The trial was funded by Cancer Research UK with support from the National Institute for Health and Care Research Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre. Dr Kotryna Temcinaite, of charity Breast Cancer Now, said: "The UK National Screening Committee now needs to consider this research as part of their current review to determine whether women with very dense breasts should be offered additional imaging during their routine screening. If the UK National Screening Committee recommends additional imaging for screening women with very dense breasts, we'll push for those changes to be rolled out as quickly as possible across the UK. "Routine breast screening is the most likely route to finding breast cancer early, when treatment is most likely to be successful. While we know that the current process can be less effective in detecting cancers in dense breasts, we still encourage all women to attend mammogram screening when invited." A Department for Health and Social Care spokesperson said: "Research is being conducted into the use of additional tests for women with dense breasts, as part of the NHS breast screening programme. The UK National Screening Committee is reviewing this evidence as it becomes available."

Why contemplating art is good for your mental health
Why contemplating art is good for your mental health

Times

time12-05-2025

  • Times

Why contemplating art is good for your mental health

The human mind might be thought of as a Bentley used only for going to the shops, a superb piece of biological engineering wasted on routine, prosaic thought processes. How much of one's inner life is wasted on to-do lists or responding to the endless chatter generated by a plethora of online social media platforms? A lot, is the answer in this increasingly cacophonous and invasive world. Now a team at Cambridge University has come up with a way of banishing everyday head clutter and replacing it with more abstract thought. Their recommendation is to study a simple piece of art and ask: Why is it beautiful? This process, say the researchers, results in 'psychological distancing', a stepping back from the everyday to enjoy a

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store