Why is Numeracy Important? - The Effects of Poor Numeracy (2024)

"Good numeracy is the best protection against unemployment, low wages and poor health."

Andreas Schleicher
OECD

We use maths in every aspect of our lives at work and in practical everyday activities at home and beyond. We use maths when we go shopping or plan a holiday, decide on a mortgage or decorate a room. Good numeracy is essential to us as parents helping our children learn, as patients understanding health information, as citizens making sense of statistics and economic news. Decisions in life are so often based on numerical information; to make the best choices, we need to be numerate.

Why is Numeracy Important? - The Effects of Poor Numeracy (1)

Numeracy and the individual

Numeracy in everyday life

We use numeracy every day in all areas of our lives. Our confidence and ability with numbers impacts us financially, socially, and professionally. It even affects our health and wellbeing.

Some examples of the ways we use maths every day include:

  • Working out how many minutes until our train
  • Increasing a recipe to serve extra guests
  • Checking we've received the right change
  • Working out how much to tip in a restaurant
  • Setting and keeping to a budget
  • Helping children with homework
  • Managing our diet and nutrition
  • Measuring medicine doses
  • Making sense of statistics and graphs in the news

Poor numeracy can affect people’s confidence and self-esteem.Testimonials from our learnershave demonstrated that improving numeracy directly contributes to growth in personal and social confidence.

Numeracy Stories

    Adult numeracy

    Why focus on adult numeracy?

    Around half of UK adults only have the numeracy we'd expect of primary school children (Skills for Life report). We want to help these millions of adults to get on with numbers at work and in life.

    While schools are vital to ensuring the younger generation build a positive relationship with numbers, the issue among adults often goes under the radar. We've shown that adults can - and do - improve their numeracy when given the right opportunities. Our ambition is for everyone to get the essential numeracy they need to get on in life.

    Many adults aren't aware of the opportunities out there. Such as help from the National Numeracy Challenge, and access to free qualifications like Functional Skills Maths.

    Try the Challenge

    Why is Numeracy Important? - The Effects of Poor Numeracy (2)

    The growing need for numeracy

    Our need for a good level of numeracy only increases as we get older.

    When we start thinking about mortgages, the financial implications of borrowing money, interest rates and pensions it's essential that we're numerate enough to make informed decisions.

    So many of the important decisions we must make as adults are based on numbers. This means that people who are not confident and capable with numbers are estimated to be worse off than those with good numeracy skills. A report in 2014 for National Numeracy by Pro Bono Economics found that the average cost to individuals with poor numeracy is £460 a year.

    The effects of poor numeracy

    There is a lot of evidence linking low numeracy skills with poor outcomes. These are some of the key reasons why numeracy is important:

    Employment

    People with poor numeracy skills are more than twiceas likely to face unemployment

    Why is Numeracy Important? - The Effects of Poor Numeracy (3)

    Wages

    Recent data by the OECD show a direct relationship between wage distribution and numeracy skills

    Why is Numeracy Important? - The Effects of Poor Numeracy (4)

    Money

    Good numeracy is linked to a range of positive financial behaviours including saving frequency and keeping up with bills

    Why is Numeracy Important? - The Effects of Poor Numeracy (5)

    Health

    In OECD and UK basic skills reports, the correlation between poor numeracy and poor health is clear. Data from the British Cohort Studies have shown that there is also a link between depression and poor numeracy

    Why is Numeracy Important? - The Effects of Poor Numeracy (6)

    Social, emotional and behavioural difficulties

    Children with these problems are more likely to struggle with numeracy, even taking into account factors such as home background and general ability

    Why is Numeracy Important? - The Effects of Poor Numeracy (7)

    School exclusions

    Pupils beginning secondary school with very low numeracy skillsare more likely to face exclusion

    Why is Numeracy Important? - The Effects of Poor Numeracy (8)

    Truancy

    14-year-olds who have poor maths skills at 11 are more than twice as likely to play truant

    Why is Numeracy Important? - The Effects of Poor Numeracy (9)

    Crime

    A quarter of young people in custody have a numeracy level below that expected of a 7-year-old. Similarly, 65% of adult prisoners have numeracy skills at or below the level expected of an 11-year-old

    Why is Numeracy Important? - The Effects of Poor Numeracy (10)

    Attitudes

    The importance of numeracy needs to be understood by everyone and everyone needs to realise that they can get on with numbers with effort and support. But the greatest constraining factor - and the one that underlies almost every worrying aspect of the numeracy story - is negative attitudes.

    It is culturally acceptable in the UK to be negative about maths. We don’t talk about other life skills in this way, but we hear ‘I can’t do maths’ so often it doesn’t seem a strange thing to say (Kowsun, 2008). Maths is seen as the remit of ‘mad scientists’, ‘nerdy’ boys, and the socially inept (Epstein et al, 2010). We talk about maths as though it is a genetic gift possessed only by a rare few and inaccessible to the general public.

    Believing that numeracy doesn't matter or writing yourself off as 'no good at maths' blocks improvement and is also harmful to the economy. In a technology-dependent and increasingly competitive world, the need for improved numeracy is greater than ever. While the causes of such a negative culture around maths are numerous and complex, key aspects include:

    • Bad experiences of maths
    • Maths anxiety
    • A lack of support for adults

    The National Numeracy Challenge

    However you feel about maths, you’re not alone. The National Numeracy Challenge is a free and easy-to-use website you can use to improve your confidence with numbers.

    You can use the Challenge on your phone, tablet or home-computer. Save your progress as you go - no timer means you can dip in and out in your own time.

    Think about how you feel about maths, and watch real life stories to find out how others feel too. These show that our attitudes towards maths are varied and shared by others.

    Start the Challenge

    Why is Numeracy Important? - The Effects of Poor Numeracy (2024)

    FAQs

    Why is Numeracy Important? - The Effects of Poor Numeracy? ›

    "Good numeracy is the best protection against unemployment, low wages and poor health." We use maths in every aspect of our lives at work and in practical everyday activities at home and beyond. We use maths when we go shopping or plan a holiday, decide on a mortgage or decorate a room.

    What are the effects of low numeracy? ›

    Those with poor numeracy are:
    • less likely to be in full-time work (regardless of how many children they had)
    • if in work, more likely to be in semi-skilled or unskilled jobs;
    • more likely to have low self-esteem;
    • more likely to feel they lacked control over their lives.

    Why is it important to develop numeracy? ›

    We need numeracy to solve problems and make sense of numbers, time, patterns and shapes for activities like cooking, reading receipts, reading instructions and even playing sport. Literacy and numeracy help people gain the fundamental skills necessary to achieve success in life.

    What is low numeracy linked to? ›

    There is ample evidence that low numeracy is associated with low income.

    What are the difficulties of numeracy? ›

    Learners with numeracy difficulties may:
    • Struggle with the basic concept of numbers, e.g. recognising a group of four counters as 'four' or equating the numeral '4' with four concrete objects.
    • Have difficulty with fundamental mathematical concepts, e.g. addition, subtraction, multiplication and division.

    Why is low numeracy a concern? ›

    That is, low numeracy increases susceptibility to effects of mood or how information is presented (e.g., as frequencies vs. percentages) and to biases in judgment and decision making (e.g., framing and ratio bias effects).

    How important is numeracy in our life? ›

    Understanding and using mathematical concepts, and being numerate, helps children know and describe the world around them and make meaning of these encounters. It is, therefore, an essential skill for successful daily life.

    What are the 5 stages of learning numeracy? ›

    What are the 5 stages of learning numeracy?
    • Emergent Stage.
    • Perceptual Stage.
    • Figurative Stage.
    • Counting On Stage.
    • Facile Stage.
    Mar 11, 2024

    Why maths is so important? ›

    Math increases your problem-solving skills.

    Math helps strengthen reasoning skills and critical thinking. It helps us think analytically about the world and reason logically. The same steps you take to understand a problem, identify the knows and unknows and then solve it, can be applied to other areas of your life.

    Is numeracy a skill or quality? ›

    Numeracy is a skill for life, learning and work. Having well-developed numeracy skills allows young people to be more confident in social settings and enhances enjoyment in a large number of leisure activities.

    What is numeracy and how does it impact health literacy? ›

    In the context of health literacy, numeracy describes a person's ability to understand clinical and public health data. We use numeracy to make decisions about screening and treatment options. There are two types of numeracy: subjective and objective.

    Is numeracy an essential skill? ›

    With greater numbers of workers engaging in more sophisticated tasks, numeracy is recognised as an essential employability skill.

    How do you solve numeracy problems? ›

    Devise a plan
    1. Look for a pattern. Sometimes, the best way to solve a problem is to look for a pattern. ...
    2. Guess and check. ...
    3. Working backwards. ...
    4. Use a formula. ...
    5. Eliminate the possibilities. ...
    6. Use direct reasoning. ...
    7. Solve a simpler problem. ...
    8. Solve an equation.
    Jun 3, 2022

    Is numeracy a hard or soft skill? ›

    Briefly, hard skills are all of those skills which are quantifiable such as degrees, certificates and mathematical skills.

    What do kids struggle with the most in math? ›

    Kids who struggle with math may have trouble with very simple concepts, like “more” vs. “less” and “bigger” vs. “smaller.” They may not understand amounts or the order of things, such as “first,” “second,” or “third.” The ability to understand basic concepts like these is known as number sense.

    What are the negative effects of low literacy? ›

    Children who have low literacy are more likely to get bad grades, have more school absences, and display behavioral issues. For children in school, poor literacy can make students feel incompetent, which can result in low self-esteem and isolation. A lack of childhood literacy also has a negative impact on adult life.

    How does Dyscalculia affect a person's life? ›

    The disorder presents itself in a range of ways, including an inability to memorize number-based facts, difficulty understanding the logical steps needed to solve a math problem and aversion to completing numerical daily tasks like telling time, scheduling appointments or calculating finances.

    What are the negative effects of low health literacy? ›

    People with low literacy are less likely to receive preventive screenings or immunizations, have an increased risk of hospitalizations, and have worse health outcomes. SOURCE: Williams MV, Baker DW, Parker RM, Nurss JR. Relationship of functional health literacy to patients' knowledge of their chronic disease.

    What are the disadvantages of Dyscalculia? ›

    Some common challenges faced by learners with Dyscalculia, a learning disability that affects performance in mathematics include: Mistakes such as number additions, substitutions, transpositions, omissions, and reversals in writing, reading, and recalling numbers.

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