Math educator Kate Snow gives parents the tools they need to teach math with confidence. This scripted, open-and-go program leads parents and instructors step-by-step through teaching all the concepts first-graders need to master:
Short, lively lessons will hold a child's attention by incorporating movement, games, and real-life situations. Straightforward, colorful worksheets give students practice with new concepts and review previously-learned material. Snow makes math fun by including optional enrichment lessons, with suggestions for wonderful math picture books to enjoy together and application activities to make math come alive.
Beyond just telling parents what to do, First Grade Math with Confidence also helps them understand why the lessons are designed the way they are, giving them the knowledge and confidence to help their children learn.
Using First Grade Math with Confidence will allow parents to build a strong math foundation for their children.
From the author of the award-winning Which One Doesn't Belong? and How Many? comes How Did You Count?, the latest title in Christopher Danielson's collection that is sure to spark conversation, questioning and wondering amongst both younger and older students alike.
This listing is for a hard cover copy of the children's picture book. There is also a Teacher's Guide / Picture book set and a 5-pack of the softcover picture book available.
2nd Grade Common Core Math: Practice Workbook Practice Questions, Answers & Explanations Recommended by Teachers Ace Academic Publishing
We believe kids get better at math with practice, resulting in confidence and a positive attitude towards maths that is required to excel in school.
This workbook provides kids with additional math practice that reinforces and complements what is taught at school. There are no pictures or word problems and focus on mastery of basic addition and subtraction.
This workbook combines traditional addition and subtraction math problems, with number bond problems. Many elementary schools teach math using Number Bonds, and we want kids to have practice on both traditional math questions and number bonds to build fluency and speed in basic arithmetic.
Improve your child's success in class with this 70-page book (For ages 6-9).
This workbook provides step-by-step instructions of the most common math concepts and includes lots of multiplication and division worksheets and practice exercises.
BOOK FEATURES
- - 70 Practice Pages sized at 8.5 in x 11 in. for Age 6+
- -Carefully-crafted problems and a variety of fun activities!
- - Multiplying and dividing by one-, two-, and three-digit numbers; working with 10, 100, 1,000, and more
- -Multiplication with regrouping, long division with remainders...
- Problem Solving
Have you been looking to learn and memorise pi to 100,000 digits? Or just looking for a gift for your friend?
Then this book of Pi is perfect for you
This book contains information of how Pi is derived, where it is used in calculations and a short history on how it got to 34.1 trillion decimal places found
Click 'Buy Now' to get this at a good value.
We see numbers on automobile license plates, addresses, weather reports, and, of course, on our smartphones. Yet we look at these numbers for their role as descriptors, not as an entity in and unto themselves. Each number has its own history of meaning, usage, and connotation in the larger world. The Secret Lives of Numbers takes readers on a journey through integers, considering their numerological assignments as well as their significance beyond mathematics and in the realm of popular culture. Of course we all know that the number 13 carries a certain value of unluckiness with it. The phobia of the number is called Triskaidekaphobia; Franklin Delano Roosevelt was known to invite and disinvite guests to parties to avoid having 13 people in attendance; high-rise buildings often skip the 13th floor out of superstition. There are many explanations as to how the number 13 received this negative honor, but from a mathematical point of view, the number 13 is also the smallest prime number that when its digits are reversed is also a prime number. It is honored with a place among the Fibonacci numbers and integral Pythagorean triples, as well as many other interesting and lesser-known occurrences.
In The Secret Lives of Numbers, popular mathematician Alfred S. Posamentier provides short and engaging mini-biographies of more than 100 numbers, starting with 1 and featuring some especially interesting numbers -like 6,174, a number with most unusual properties -to provide readers with a more comprehensive picture of the lives of numbers both mathematically and socially.
,Simple Math: Ace Academic Publishing Multiplication and Division Workbook 200 Math Word Problems 3000+ Fact Problems Everyday Practice
I hope that this Teacher's Guide supports your own inquiry into children's mathematics, and I hope that the images elicit brilliance from the children you do math with--wherever you and they may count.
From the author of the award-winning Which One Doesn't Belong? and How Many? comes How Did You Count?, the latest title in Christopher Danielson's collection that is sure to spark conversation, questioning, and wondering amongst both younger and older students alike.
In this innovative Teacher's Guide, Danielson gives you the tools you need to both begin and dig deeper into the How Did You Count? routine. In clear, accessible language, Danielson discusses the mathematical ideas likely to emerge on each page of the How Did You Count? picture book and helps you anticipate and understand your students' likely answers. Through classroom stories, he models listening to, talking about, and delighting in students' ideas around counting, numbers, and operations.
Reading this Teacher's Guide alongside your copy of the How Did You Count? children's picture book will help you and your students discover together how the beauty of counting and numerical relationships and structure extends far beyond 1, 2, 3.
This listing is for the Teacher's Guide only. There is also a Teacher's Guide and How Did You Count? picture book set available.
Help kindergartners at risk for math difficulties with these explicit, evidence-based interventions. Used on their own or as a follow-up to the Number Sense Screener(TM) (NSS(TM)) , the interventions in this user-friendly guide are a fun, simple, and highly effective way to boost key math skills such as oral counting, number recognition, and numeral writing. Teachers will get 24 scripted lessons, perfect for helping small groups of struggling students in just 30 minutes each. Proven in studies to improve young children's number sense, these engaging lessons help resolve early math struggles before first grade--and start students on the path to long-term success in elementary school and beyond.
INCLUDES: 24 engaging lessons with explicit teacher scripts and instructions, plus photocopiable materials: 7 sets of flashcards, 12 charts that illustrate key math concepts, and a student activity sheet for each lesson.
Simple Math: Ace Academic Publishing Addition and Subtraction Workbook 200 Math Word Problems 3000+ Fact Problems Everyday Practice
An essential guide to recognizing bogus numbers and misleading data
Numbers are often intimidating, confusing, and even deliberately deceptive--especially when they are really big. The media loves to report on millions, billions, and trillions, but frequently makes basic mistakes or presents such numbers in misleading ways. And misunderstanding numbers can have serious consequences, since they can deceive us in many of our most important decisions, including how to vote, what to buy, and whether to make a financial investment. In this short, accessible, enlightening, and entertaining book, Brian Kernighan teaches anyone--even diehard math-phobes--how to demystify the numbers that assault us every day. Giving you the simple tools you need to avoid being fooled by dubious numbers, Millions, Billions, Zillions is an essential survival guide for a world drowning in big--and often bad--data.