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TableMagix 7x - There is MAGIC in knowing your tables by heart: Know your 7x table by heart

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The Magic of Knowing Your Tables by HeartThe very core of performance in mathematics for learners is seated in their knowledge of the 12 Time Tables. Use this flashcard system to get your child to test his or her knowledge regularly.All maths invariably relates back to using the 12x Tables in some form. If learners do not know his or her 12x Tables by heart, they will get stuck and their marks will go down. We have gone through school with our own children and we are now going through school with our grandchild. She is performing exceptionally in all subjects but her maths marks were way down.In helping her it soon became evident that her problem was that she did not know her tables by heart. She battled doing simple calculations and that caused her to fall behind during test times to such an extent that she could never do all questions.The result? Bad marks in maths.The introduction of this “flashcard� system worked like magic. We got her to do just one Table a day every day - an investment of fewer than 10 minutes.The result? Her marks, self-confidence and her ‘quality of life� improved and she was a much more relaxed and happy child.There is also a print version available, and there is more ‘magic� on our website at

30 pages, Paperback

Published December 2, 2020

About the author

Rian Malan

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Rian Malan is a South African author, journalist, documentarist and songwriter of Afrikaner descent. He first rose to prominence as the author of the memoir My Traitor's Heart, which, like the bulk of his work, deals with South African society in a historical and contemporary perspective and focuses on racial relations. As a journalist, he has written for major newspapers in South Africa, Great Britain and the USA.Malan grew up in a middle-class and anti-apartheid Afrikaner family in a white suburb of Johannesburg. He has described how, as a teenager, he formed a rock band that associated with black artists and wanted to rebel against the apartheid system, at a time when he in fact had virtually no interaction with black people. He attended the then Witwatersrand university for a year. To avoid conscription, which was compulsory for all white males (see End Conscription Campaign), he moved to Los Angeles in 1977 and worked as a journalist.

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