Now, its some time since I even made an attempt to teach maths in a scholl - mostly to non-English speaking children so often teaching the language of maths than necessarily the principles of the subject. However, I do remember the Head of Maths dropping into one such class (one of the pupils was a Yera 10 student who was extremely bright and had managed to crack the linguistic code that is English within 6 months of arriving in the UK - but struggled with anything to do with Maths. I don't recall the actual problem we were dealing with, but it probably involved some multiplication and division, as I remember the teacher taking me tone side at the end of the class and saying something along the lines of 'I wish I was allowed to bounce from one way of division to another like you've just done. In mainstream, we have to teach things in a specific way; the fact that there are 4 ways of doing (and therefore teaching) division is irrelevant; we have to stick to a particular way'.
That is why I found Gove's prescriptiveness so pointless, as different children learn maths (& spelling & writing &, for all I know, science) in different ways. Kinesthetically, visually, by means of touch and through hearing/listening.