New Calculator, Old Habits: Comparing the Casio fx-CG50, fx-CG100, fx-991EX and fx-991CW
There are moments in teaching when the most interesting research is not done in a university, a government department, or a glossy product launch.
It happens when you put four calculators on the desk and say to a student:
“Choose whichever one you like.”
Over the last year I have been doing exactly that. In lessons, students have had access to different Casio calculators, including the older fx-991EX, the newer fx-991CW, the established graphic calculator fx-CG50, and the newer fx-CG100.
On paper, the newer models should win. They look modern. They have clearer screens. They are designed around menus rather than requiring students to remember quite so many individual buttons. They are shiny, new and, in some ways, more logical.
And yet, again and again, when students are actually solving maths and science problems under pressure, many of them reach for the older calculator.
Not because it is technically better in every way.
But because it feels faster.
And in an examination, faster often feels safer.
The Calculator Is Not Just a Tool — It Is Part of the Student’s Thinking
Teachers often talk about calculators as if they are simply devices for getting answers.
That is not quite true.
For many GCSE and A-level students, the calculator becomes part of the way they think through a problem. It is not separate from the mathematics. It is woven into the process.
A student solving a quadratic, checking a standard form answer, converting a fraction to a decimal, using trigonometry, finding a probability, or working out a physics calculation is not just pressing buttons. They are following a sequence of thought.
That sequence might look like this:
- Understand the question.
- Decide what mathematics or science is needed.
- Set up the calculation.
- Use the calculator correctly.
- Interpret the answer.
- Decide whether the answer is sensible.
The calculator sits right in the middle of that process.
If the student has to stop and think, “Where has Casio hidden that function?”, the flow is broken.
That is where the difference between a button-driven calculator and a menu-driven calculator becomes important.
Button-Driven Calculators: The Comfort of Muscle Memory
The older Casio fx-991EX has become familiar to many students. They know where things are. They have developed muscle memory.
They do not always know the official name of the function. They may not even fully understand the structure of the calculator. But they know the route.
For example:
“I press this, then this, then this.”
That may not sound very sophisticated, but it matters.
When a student is nervous, sitting in an exam hall, trying to remember whether the answer should be in standard form, three significant figures, radians, degrees, fractions or decimals, familiarity matters enormously.
The older models often feel quicker because important functions have obvious dedicated keys or familiar shortcuts.
The most common example in my lessons is the S⇔D button.
Students love it.
They use it constantly.
They want to switch between exact form and decimal form quickly. They want to see whether an answer of ( \frac{7}{12} ) is approximately 0.583. They want to check whether a surd answer looks reasonable. They want to move quickly between the exact mathematical answer and the practical scientific answer.
On the older calculator, this feels instant.
On the newer menu-driven models, even where the same function exists, students can feel as though they have to go looking for it. A three-step menu may be perfectly logical, but to a student under pressure it can feel like a delay.
That delay may only be a few seconds.
But a few seconds in an exam can feel like a lifetime.
Menu-Driven Calculators: A Better Idea, But Not Always a Better Experience
The newer Casio calculators are trying to solve a real problem.
Modern scientific and graphic calculators can do a huge number of things. They can solve equations, handle distributions, work with vectors and matrices, plot graphs, process statistics, and in the case of graphic calculators, display mathematical ideas visually.
The difficulty is obvious: where do you put all those functions?
If every function has its own button, the calculator becomes a forest of symbols. Students spend their time hunting for tiny labels printed above keys. Some functions require SHIFT, ALPHA, menus, modes and sub-menus.
A menu-driven system tries to make that easier.
Instead of expecting students to remember obscure button combinations, the calculator guides them through options. This can be very helpful when students are learning a function for the first time.
For example, a menu can make it clearer that the student is choosing between:
- calculation
- statistics
- equation solving
- distribution
- table
- spreadsheet
- complex numbers
- vectors
- matrices
- graphing
That is sensible.
It is also closer to the way students use phones, tablets and computers. They are used to icons, menus and scrolling.
But there is a problem.
Calculators are not phones.
Students do not use calculators in relaxed conditions while browsing. They use them when they are trying to solve difficult problems, often while being timed, often while anxious, and often while also trying to remember the mathematics.
A menu can be more logical and still feel slower.
That is the key point.
The Shiny Calculator Test
I have found this fascinating in lessons.
Put the newer calculator on the desk and students are interested. They pick it up. They look at the screen. They notice that it feels modern. They may even say it looks better.
Then give them a real problem.
A physics calculation involving standard form.
A trigonometry question.
A simultaneous equation.
A probability calculation.
A surd answer that needs converting to a decimal.
A statistics question requiring the mean and standard deviation.
Suddenly, many students go back to the calculator they know.
The decision is not really about the calculator. It is about confidence.
The student is saying:
“I know I can get the answer out of this one.”
That is an important teaching point.
The best calculator is not always the one with the newest interface. It is the one the student can use accurately, quickly and confidently.
fx-991EX vs fx-991CW: The Scientific Calculator Battle
The fx-991EX has been a very popular advanced scientific calculator. It has natural textbook display, many advanced functions, and a layout that students often become comfortable with after repeated use.
The fx-991CW represents a newer style of working. It has a clearer display, a more modern interface and a menu-based structure.
For a teacher, the newer layout has advantages. It can make it easier to explain where certain functions live. Instead of saying, “Press SHIFT, then this key, then choose option 3,” you can sometimes guide students through a clearer menu.
However, for students who already know the fx-991EX, the change can feel like being moved from a familiar kitchen into a newly designed one.
Everything may be cleaner.
Everything may be labelled.
But the teaspoons are no longer in the drawer where you expect them.
That is not a trivial issue.
In maths and science, students need fluency. They need to focus on the problem, not the device.
A student solving a chemistry calculation on moles does not want to be thinking about calculator navigation. A physics student resolving forces does not want to waste mental effort finding a function. A maths student doing binomial probabilities does not want to lose confidence because the route has changed.
The fx-991CW may be a better design for a new student starting from scratch.
But for many existing students, the fx-991EX still feels like home.
fx-CG50 vs fx-CG100: Graphic Calculators and the Same Problem on a Larger Scale
The same issue appears with graphic calculators.
The fx-CG50 is already well established. It is powerful, colourful and capable of supporting students through GCSE Further Maths, A-level Maths, A-level Further Maths and beyond. It can graph functions, handle statistics, work with matrices and vectors, and help students visualise ideas that are otherwise quite abstract.
The fx-CG100 is the newer model. It has a more modern ClassWiz-style interface, clearer menus and a design intended to make the move from scientific calculator to graphic calculator smoother.
That is a good idea.
Students moving from a scientific calculator to a graphic calculator often struggle because the graphic calculator feels like a completely different machine. If the newer scientific and graphic calculators share a similar style of navigation, that could help.
But again, the classroom question is not only:
“Which calculator has the better interface?”
It is also:
“Which calculator can the student use when they are tired, nervous and halfway through a difficult question?”
For a confident student who is learning the newer system from the beginning, the fx-CG100 may feel more logical.
For a student who has already invested time in the fx-CG50, the older model may still feel quicker.
The Hidden Skill: Calculator Fluency
One of the mistakes students make is thinking that calculator use does not need practice.
They assume that because a calculator gives answers, they can simply pick it up when needed.
That is not how it works.
Calculator fluency is a skill.
Students need to know:
- how to enter fractions correctly
- how to convert between exact and decimal answers
- how to use standard form
- how to check whether the calculator is in degrees or radians
- how to use brackets properly
- how to store and recall values
- how to solve equations
- how to use table mode
- how to calculate statistics
- how to find probabilities
- how to use graphing functions, if they have a graphic calculator
More importantly, they need to know when the calculator answer is unreasonable.
A calculator will quite happily give a student a wrong answer if the student enters the wrong calculation.
It does not raise an eyebrow.
It does not say, “Are you sure a car is travelling at 4,000 metres per second?”
It does not say, “That pH value looks suspicious.”
It does not say, “You appear to have used radians instead of degrees.”
That is the teacher’s job.
Eventually, it becomes the student’s job.
Practical Example 1: Fractions and Decimals
A student works out an answer and gets:
[
\frac{13}{8}
]
In pure maths, this may be a perfectly good answer.
In a physics problem, the student may need to understand that this is:
[
1.625
]
On the older calculator, the student presses S⇔D and instantly sees the decimal.
That quick conversion helps them judge the answer.
Is 1.625 metres sensible?
Is 1.625 seconds sensible?
Is 1.625 amps sensible?
The button is not just a convenience. It supports understanding.
If the same task requires going into a format menu, the student may still get there, but the interruption is greater.
For a confident student, that may not matter.
For a nervous student, it does.
Practical Example 2: Standard Form in Science
In GCSE and A-level science, standard form appears constantly.
Students may need to calculate values such as:
[
6.02 \times 10^{23}
]
or
[
3.0 \times 10^8
]
or
[
1.6 \times 10^{-19}
]
The calculator needs to become invisible. Students should be thinking about Avogadro’s constant, the speed of light, charge, energy, wavelength or frequency — not about where the exponential key is.
When a student uses the same calculator every week, they gradually become fluent.
They stop fighting the machine.
That is when the science improves.
Practical Example 3: Graphing Calculators and A-Level Maths
Graphic calculators can be enormously useful in A-level Maths.
They allow students to see the shape of a function, check the number of roots, explore transformations and understand why an answer makes sense.
For example, when solving:
[
x^3 - 4x - 1 = 0
]
a graphic calculator can help students see that the equation has more than one solution.
That visual understanding is valuable.
But only if the student can use the calculator confidently.
If half the lesson is spent finding the graphing mode, setting the window, adjusting the scale and working out how to trace intersections, the technology becomes a barrier rather than a support.
This is why the choice between the fx-CG50 and fx-CG100 is not simply about specifications.
It is about teaching time, student confidence and repeated practice.
The Teacher’s Dilemma
As a teacher, I can see both sides.
The newer calculators are trying to make things clearer. They are more menu driven. They reduce the number of buttons students need to search through. They look more like modern technology. In many ways, they are probably the direction calculators need to go.
But students do not always choose what is technically newest.
They choose what helps them survive the question in front of them.
That is especially true for students who are already anxious about maths.
A student who is unsure about algebra does not need another layer of uncertainty from the calculator.
A student who struggles with physics calculations does not need to wonder where the decimal conversion has gone.
A student who is already worried about an exam does not want to change calculator systems in May.
When Should Students Change Calculator?
My advice is simple.
Do not change calculator just before an exam unless there is a very good reason.
A new calculator needs a learning period. Students need to use it for homework, classwork, revision and past papers before relying on it in an exam.
Ideally, students should use the same calculator throughout a course.
For GCSE students moving into A-level Maths, the summer can be a good time to change, because there is time to practise.
For A-level students already deep into Year 13, changing calculator may do more harm than good unless they are prepared to put in the practice.
For students buying their first advanced calculator, the newer menu-driven models may be perfectly sensible.
For students who already know the older models well, there is no shame in staying with what works.
The Real Lesson: Technology Must Serve Learning
The point of a calculator is not to be impressive.
The point of a calculator is to help students do mathematics and science more effectively.
If a new interface reduces confusion, that is excellent.
If it slows students down because they cannot find familiar functions, that matters.
If a calculator helps students explore graphs, understand statistics and check answers, it is doing its job.
If it becomes another thing to panic about, it is not.
The best calculator is the one that the student can use confidently, accurately and fluently.
Sometimes that will be the newest model.
Sometimes it will be the older one with the familiar button.
Conclusion: Shiny Is Not the Same as Useful
The newer Casio calculators are clever, modern and thoughtfully designed. The move towards clearer menus makes sense, especially as calculators become more powerful and include more functions.
But my small classroom experiment has shown something important.
Students do not only choose features.
They choose confidence.
They choose familiarity.
They choose the calculator that lets them get on with the maths.
For many students, the older button-driven models still feel easier because they have already built the habits. They know where things are. They trust the route. They like the S⇔D button because it does exactly what they want, quickly and without fuss.
The newer models may well become the natural choice for the next generation of students, especially if they start with them early enough. But teachers and parents should not underestimate the value of fluency.
A calculator is not just bought.
It is learned.
And, like most things in maths and science, the learning takes practice.



