Showing posts with label cool math online. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cool math online. Show all posts

Sunday, September 24, 2017

3 Fun Ways to Teach Kids Math at Home

Math is actually not as dreaded a subject as it is made out to be, provided a teacher inculcates a sense of understanding in kids at an early age. Most people who talk about suffering from ‘math phobia’ have the same underlying problem – they never really grasped the basics correctly. Hence, it is important for kids to get their facts and figures in place right from the very beginning.

Though there is no dearth of cool math games like these that help kids in learning math in a fun way, here are 3 simple ways you could help them with the subject at home itself.

1. Playing with Lego
Duplo” by WerbeFabrik is licensed under CC by 2.0

Playing with Lego bricks can be an enjoyable way of introducing kids to the basics of math, right from preschool. The colorful bricks are captivating and the kids stay gainfully occupied while playing too since their hands and minds are busy all the while. Here’s how you can begin with a simple game: Use an erasable marker to number 6 bricks of different colors from 1-6 (there can be as many series of 1-6 as there are kids playing). Leave them loose in a pile.

Take a dice and ask your little one to roll it. Ask her to then say the number out loud and look for a brick with the same number. The game is simple – roll the dice, recognize the number, find the corresponding numbered brick and build your tower. Then it is the next player’s turn to do the same. The game continues till one of the players completes her tower with 6 bricks. She is then declared the winner. This is just an example of a very basic Lego game to teach preschoolers number identification.

(Note: In case a number shows up on the dice which has already been rolled in the past, the said player skips her turn.)

2. Gardening with Math
Child” by sdumas29 is licensed under CC by 2.0

Planting your garden for the season is a fun task, as well as a good opportunity to get your kids to learn some gardening and brush up on their math skills. Bonus: They can get their hands as messy as they want! Start by handing your kids a measuring tape and asking them to take and note down measurements – the size of the planting box, how much space a particular plant needs, and the like. Also, involve your kids in counting out the seeds and/or packets of other supplies too that are required.

Next comes the planting part. Allow your child to use a ruler to measure out the depth at which the seeds need to be planted. Most seed packets have this part mentioned on the backs. Space out the rows between seeds appropriately using the ruler for it as well. Finally, it is a good idea for your child to maintain and update a notebook to record, say, the weekly growth of plants in centimeters and inches.

3. Playing Cards
Card” by Pexels is licensed under CC by 2.0

Card games can be a good way to spend quality time with the family. You could also use it as an opportune time for your kids to practice basic math calculations. For instance, the game called Go Fish! can help with addition skills. Or else, the evergreen Memory game played using a single deck of playing cards can never go wrong. You could play it like this: Decide on a featured number and remove all cards from the deck that are higher or more than that specific number. Shuffle as usual, placing all cards face down on a flat table.

Each player has to flip two cards from anywhere to find a matching pair. Say, the number you’ve chosen is 7. Then its pairs could be (6+1), (5+2), (4+3) and so on. The player who manages to find the maximum number of matching pairs emerges as the winner.

Simple and fun, aren’t they? Do add more ideas to this list if you too use some fun methods to teach kids math at home.

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

3 Fun Ways to Prevent the Math Summer Slide

According to a research carried out by Oxford Learning, an online program which caters to the learning needs of students of different age groups, math skills equivalent to approximately 2.6 months of learning are lost by kids over the summer vacation. What’s more, if kids and parents manage to put in just 2-3 hours per week towards the subject, this learning loss can be prevented to a considerable extent. Also, Duke University researchers claim that math skills decline more over the summer than academic skills in any other subject.

Mathematicsby ArtsyBee is licensed under CC by 2.0

Here are a couple of fun math activities that can be used to brush up the kids’ math skills over the summer so that they are able to retain a good part of whatever was taught to them over the past academic year.

Math in the Kitchen
Ask your kid to count how many cookies are there on the cookie tray once it comes freshly baked out of the oven. A good way would be to count the number of rows and columns to calculate the number of cookies, hence helping the kids recall and practice their multiplication tables. Allow your kids to measure out the volume of water that goes into the spaghetti recipe you’re cooking. Younger kids can be made to set the table for dinner and count out the number of forks and knives required for the people at the dining table. The number of pints in a gallon, the number of ounces in a cup, kids can get to know these basics of math measurements like the back of their hand if they help out in the kitchen on an everyday basis.

Math with Games
You can pick from an endless variety of exciting math games to play with your kids and as a family. One of the relatively recent additions to the market is what is known as printable math games – what you need to do is simply download certain e-books from the internet to your computer, print them out and voila! You have a great math game on your hands which you’ve never played before. Alternatively, you could introduce your child to online math games which come in all shapes and sizes and for all ages. Playing card games or board games like the tried-and-tested monopoly are other equally good options which allow you to spend quality time together as a family as well as teach kids the fundamentals of counting, money and otherwise.

Math with Videos
Ever heard of something known as a multiplication rap? Well, it’s an easy and entertaining way to help your kids sing along and learn their multiplication tables in style. Also, doodles are not always just absent-minded scribbles and squiggles drawn on paper. Doodling in math by connecting dots, making binary trees and practicing the Fibonacci series are fun ways kids can practice certain mathematical concepts, be means of watching certain educational videos on sites like YouTube.

Because the only way to learn mathematics is to do mathematics, as a parent you just need to make sure some form of math is incorporated into your child’s play – one of the most effective ways to do away with the otherwise inevitable summer slide.

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Live Everyday like it’s Leap Day!


‘Leap year, Leap year, When will you be?
Every FOUR years, THEN you’ll see!
You want more? We do too!
How many more can you leap to?’

This leap year rhyme has been doing the rounds lately – and why not, considering the fact that the present year 2016 is a leap year and it has come after a gap of four whole years! The other day my young son looked at me with a quizzical expression and inquired about the extra day in the month of February this year and how all the kids were talking about it. Here’s how I decided to make the explanation simple for him; perhaps it could help you too in order to explain the same to your kids.
  • A leap year is different from other years as in it has 366 days instead of the usual 365 days.
  • February is the month with the extra day, with 29 instead of 28 days.
  • A leap year occurs every 4 years (here’s a good opportunity to test their multiplication table of 4 and ask them about the next leap year).
  • February 29 is called a leap day.
  • It takes the earth 365 days to orbit around the sun once - hence an earth year has 365 days in it.
While younger kids would probably be satisfied with digesting this much of information, here’s a wonderful video I discovered about leap years which would be fascinating for older kids:


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Tuesday, September 22, 2015

3 Fun Math Apps – For Tiny Tots to Tweens

“The only way to learn mathematics is to do mathematics.”

Coming from Paul Richard Halmos, the renowned mathematician who is credited with significant advances in several fields of mathematics such as probability theory, statistics and mathematical logic, these words hold so much power. But then when it comes to kids, especially the kindergarten and the just-passed kindergarten ones, getting them to sit down and do mathematics is next to impossible. Hence, parents find themselves turning to other ‘more interesting’ means like online math games, story-telling (for instance, four frogs jumped into a pond, then one more, how many are there in all?), math story books (a popular one is Each Orange Had 8 Slices: A Counting Book by Paul Giganti, Jr. and Donald Crews), to name a few.

Along the same lines, here are three fun math apps for different age groups – from toddlers to middle schoolers – which are an exciting way to help your kids get rid of their math woes.


TallyTots (For 2-4 year olds)
The first thing that strikes you about the interface of this app is that it is extremely colorful – and hence, toddlers as well as preschoolers are going to love it. It is a complete package with twenty different mini-games within it, which begins as twenty cards with numbers spread across a cheerful blue sky background. Among the games is a mathematical puzzle which needs to be solved, a garden with flowers which need to be watered, and even chipmunks that need to be fed with a specific number of acorns. To top it all, the one reason which made me love this app most of all has to be the melodious and very simple to learn sing-along counting song, which kids will pick up in no time whatsoever.

The Counting Kingdom (For 6-10 year olds)
This one is all about magic, monsters and (of course!) math. You have a kingdom of your own and monsters are invading it. Even though the monsters are quite cute, you need to banish them from your kingdom, otherwise there will be huge destruction. But how? Through magic spells of course! As the said monsters gradually start appearing in the form of a grid in front of your fortress, the onus is on you to add their numbers together in such a way so as to whip up three different spells (read: sums) to scare the attackers away. Remember the Plants versus Zombies game, in which one had to attack and destroy zombies with dangerous looking plants? The only difference in The Counting Kingdom is that you need to use math equations in place of plants to attack the approaching monsters. This tower defense strategy game will go a long way in brushing up your little one’s addition skills, as he goes past addition problems with increasing complexity at each of the 30 levels presented in the game.

Math Snacks (For 10-12 year olds)
This app is meant especially for those tweens who don’t particularly adore math. It is something akin to a one-stop shop for parents and teachers of the said age group, replete with teacher and student learning material, games and interactive videos. Very unlike the traditional math that is taught in classrooms, Math Snacks caters primarily to the mathematical learning needs of students of grades 6-8 and presents the subject through a variety of different animations and short games. The fact that this app was created by the New Mexico State University Learning Games Lab is reason enough to introduce your kids to it; a very well-designed interactive math app.

With fascinating apps like these on the rise, who knows, there might soon be a day when we won’t know what ‘math phobia’ actually means!

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

How can Cool Math Games Online Improve Grades?

There’s no point trying to add when you haven’t learnt to count yet! Clear concepts come only with regular practice and regular practice in turn makes kids very slapdash with math worksheets, problems and activities. Besides breaking the language barriers that kids from diverse backgrounds face, cool math games minimize teachers’ and parents’ involvement and develop leadership and team-playing qualities in them. 

 

Skills of Problem-solving


The moment kids embark on a math problem they invariably get lost in the tangles of words and fail to arrive at a conclusive answer. Traditional ways of teaching math can be extremely suffocating to kids who find it difficult to comprehend. A step-by-step approach of cool math games that break up complex steps for kids to understand and solve then solve is indispensible to the learning of math. Cool math games create coherent situations that students find simple enough to unravel and therefore develop an interest.

Ability to Form Relationships 


Cool math games are generally segmented into steps that required to be solved independently of each other in order to arrive at an overall answer. A step-by-step approach adopted by games developers help kids break up the problem and solve. The ability to form relationships take kids a long way in terms of social skills and speech and writing coordination. Every subject is based on inherent relationships between each element, cracking which students can go a long way in improving grades.  


Logical and Practical Thinking Process 


Thankfully, today’s educational system is not identical to the erstwhile teaching traditions which had never given kids to explore as much as they do now. There are plenty of math games online that give students a world of options to explore and experiment with new and innovative techniques and learn in the process. The horde of cool math online encourages kids to think practically and with use logic over traditional knowledge. At higher grades, kids apply the knowledge to other subjects like science and social studies to understand complex and advanced concepts independently. It’s therefore obvious how cool math online go a long way in improving grades in other subjects as well. 

Examine and Understand Patterns 


Studying patterns and identifying is imperative to accomplishing goals. Cool math games are all about patterns and patterns help to predict what will be the next in sequence and escape the monotony of tedious and long math process of solving problems. If one studies patterns in math games ideally with precision, then it’s easy to arrive at an answer in a jiffy, example being the sum of numbers 1 to 100. If studied carefully, it can be noticed that 1 and 100 sums up to 101, 2 and 99 makes 101, 3 and 98 too makes 101 and that this pattern is repeated 50 times counting from 1 to 100. Therefore, multiplying 101 into 50 can be the simplest way to arrive at the solution! This sense and inclination of patterns can make students realize the relation between each topic and score higher grades. Understanding patterns helps kids choose a lucrative and exciting career path when they grow up, that of cryptography.