A math rhyme for “fraction-hate.”

Posted on : 08-03-2011 | By : Amber | In : Math

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To keep the multiplying and dividing processes straight.

Sorry – I couldn’t resist a little extra rhyming there. Apparently, I’m in rhyme mode. But it was necessary to save our sanity during math time. I promise.

Princess has recently learned how to divide fractions. Before that, of course, she learned how to multiply them, and she was doing just fine. In fact, she’s never really had a fraction-related problem AT ALL. That is, until we introduced– DUH, DUH, DUHHH… DIVISION.

Suddenly everything went out the window. Her frustration (and mine) was mounting as she no longer was certain when to flip, when not to flip, WHICH ONE to flip… it was mass confusion.

In case you’ve not quite reached that point with your child and you need a refresher course, for I’m not sure I would  have remembered if I hadn’t read the lesson first, when multiplying fractions you multiply numerators and then multiply denominators and then you simplify/reduce. When dividing fractions, first you “flip” the divisor (the one you are dividing BY:  1/4 divided BY 2/3) and then you multiply like before. (1/4  /  2/3  = 1/4  X  3/2  =  3/8.)

Poor Princess. She couldn’t keep it straight. And it only got worse when you added “multiplying and dividing a fraction and a whole number” and “multiplying and dividing mixed fractions.”

Oh the Fraction Blues.

So tonight, as I mentioned, we made a rhyme. And I’m really hoping that it will help, that she can recite it to herself when she’s doubting what to do. Here it goes:

pie 300x199 A math rhyme for fraction hate.

Multiplying fractions

Is as easy as pie.

Multiply each straight across

And then simplify.

Dividing gets a bit tricky,

There’s an extra step to take.

First flip the one you’re dividing BY

And the rest’s a piece of cake.

The only that I’m not completely satisfied with is that the rhyme doesn’t SAY to multiply across after you flip — but she’s got that part down. This rhyme will help her remember that there is no flipping while multiplying and which one to flip while dividing. Whatcha think? Think it will help? *fingers crossed*

Do you have any fancy rhymes or tricks that you teach your kids?

Photo Credit: cc icon attribution small A math rhyme for fraction hate. Some rights reserved by TheCulinaryGeek

Currclick Freebie: Multiplication Game

Posted on : 16-01-2011 | By : Amber | In : Math

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Another weekly freebie from Currclick:

multiplicationgame 204x300 Currclick Freebie: Multiplication Game

A multiplication game by teachwithgames.com, I’ve downloaded it myself to play with Drama Queen, who is just beginning to learn about multiplication. If I like it, I It’s the first in a series, and if it works well for us we could pick up more advanced levels for Princess and Drama Queen to play together, providing Princess with with a little bit of extra practice.

The Biggest Flash Card Deck – EVER. And mastering math as a right-brain, visual learner.

Posted on : 01-10-2010 | By : Amber | In : Math, Our School

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FlashCards The Biggest Flash Card Deck   EVER. And mastering math as a right brain, visual learner.

I KNOW how some of you feel about flash cards.. I can *see* your reason, but I’ve never really *gotten* it. Perhaps.. it’s because flash cards appeal to my learning style.

We’ve used flash cards before but they’ve been a tool that we’ve used for a little here and there. I’ve have never been very strict or diligent about them. They’ve been a tool, not a regimen.

I’ve been even less strict with verbal recitations. You know, like reciting times tables and such. Perhaps because those DON’T appeal to my learning style at all. (I find it incredibly boring, and a big bother in my day to have to go through reciting the entire chart of facts with my children.)

However. (There’s always a however.) Perhaps… If we had been more strict with one or the other (whichever is more appealing to the learning style of the child in question) math facts would come a little bit easier for the girls. They can do them. They know them. But they have to think about them, and sometimes count on their fingers. It doesn’t come easy. And I want it to be EASY for them. I want the girls to be like their Daddy, who has the fastest score on Nintendo Brain Age for computations. He’s unbeatable! I mean.. GOOD GRIEF he’s fast at rattling off those answers! My brain, she is not so fast.

Unfortunately for Princess, she is more like me than her Daddy when it comes to math. She’s right-brained, artistic, visual.. and math is doable but not easy. After doing a little bit of research online yesterday, I landed on this article at the HSLDA website about “Right Brain Math.

Check out these quotes:

Left brain dominant children learn their math facts easily by repeating them orally, practicing them in timed tests, and working with flash cards. This is the sequential way that works for the left brain, auditory learner. The right brain dominant child, however, likes and often requires a different approach both to memorizing facts, and performing calculation procedures.

Left brain: Orally. Right brain: Other methods. CHECK!

When first- and second-graders learn how to add and subtract, they are frequently given manipulatives to aid them in understanding the concepts. Frequently, however, manipulatives are used longer than necessary and become a crutch, so that rapid calculation is unobtainable. Fingers replace the manipulatives, and continue to slow down the process of quick adding and subtracting.

Manipulatives, fingers, crutch, slow down the process. CHECK!

To learn the number facts using flashcards, since the right brain child learns best when he sees the “whole picture,” put the answer on the front of the flashcard, preferably in color. Then have him look up at it, just as he does to learn his spelling words. With the answer on the front, (which left-brainers tend to think of as cheating), the child learns to see the problem with the answer, so that when just the problem is presented, in his mind’s eye he can still see the answer, usually in the color you originally had it.

Love this idea!!

So now we come to “The Biggest Flash Card Deck Ever!” (Echo on “ever, ever, ever…”)

FlashCards2 The Biggest Flash Card Deck   EVER. And mastering math as a right brain, visual learner.

Inspired by this article, using what materials I had on hand, and tweaking the idea a little bit, I sat down to make the most complete flash card deck for my right-brained, visual learner child.

Using a stack of note cards, a red crayon and a black crayon, I started with multiplying by zero and went all the way through multiplying by 12. The front of the card has the equation in black, with a blank line where the answer belongs, and the back has the full equation with the answer in red. Do the math on that– 13 times 13 is ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY NINE FLASHCARDS!! Double-sided! Princess and I were joking about it later, “Yes,.. with one mega stack of flash cards and only HOURS a day, you too can master multiplication!” ;0)

So how does she use them?

  1. She uses them herself. I listen in, but she’s ten, so she’s completely independent on this.
  2. She starts with the unanswered side facing toward her, reads the problem out loud and says the answer. Then she flips it over and reads the equation out loud WITH the answer. This time she gets the visual input, with the added benefit of having the answer to stand out in red.
  3. If she can’t answer the blank side, gets it wrong, or hesitates too long (I want her to get strong enough in math to be able to answer within 2 -3 seconds) then she adds the card to the back of the stack to do again. If she gets it right and answers quickly, she sets it aside.
  4. The math facts that she doesn’t know as well will get more practice, because she’ll keep practicing them until she gets it right quickly enough and can set it aside.
  5. By having EVERY sum from the multiplication chart (both “4 x 6 = 24″ and “6 x 4 = 24″) she will have mental pictures for both variations, rather than having to flip it in her head, hopefully making it easier and faster for her.
  6. We’ll be reviewing these every day until she can quickly answer all of them (we may break it up into 2 or 3 sessions. Yesterday she did it all in one, today she did it in two.) Once she masters the entire set, we will do small portions each day or review the entire stack once or twice a week for maintenance. Once she’s mastered multiplication, we’ll need to make a set for division so she can *see* those, too.

This sounds like a lot of work. Well, it IS a lot of work. But it’s a lot MORE work trying to do long and short division with weak math facts LET ME ASSURE YOU. Princess is on board (even though the stack of cards is a little daunting) because she sees the benefit in the long run. The article on HSLDA also talks about using the Touch Method, triangle families, and word picture stories to help a visual child.

Bonus Points! When I read the paragraph about the Touch Method I thought, “Yes! Yes! That’s exactly what I was talking about!” Just a week or two ago I was explaining Big Daddy how I *see* math in my head – that when he SAYS “7 X 9″, I SEE “7 X 9 = 63″ in my mind’s eye. He looked at me like I was crazy, or had two heads. Then I told him about being young and counting dots on the numbers. “DOTS ON THE NUMBERS?” Then he really thought I was crazy. He thought I made it up. “Probably some crazy thing you just started doing, not something somebody taught you,” he said. See – Big Daddy is the left brain, auditory learner. He has NO CLUE what I’m talking about. It might as well be Greek!

Princess is definitely NOT an auditory learner. One of the things I’m trying to do in school this year is make adjustments for learning styles and teach the kids how they learn, how to learn things for themselves in ways that match their learning styles. It just makes sense to do more research on teaching math to visual learners. You’d THINK that math would come easily to visual learners, since it consists mainly of visual numbers on a visual page waiting to be visually completed. Unfortunately, the traditional approach to teaching math facts is largely oral. What I need to do for Princess is make sure that she gets the visual instruction and support that she needs.

FlashCards3 The Biggest Flash Card Deck   EVER. And mastering math as a right brain, visual learner.

Now Drama Queen on the other hand…. I think she might NEED to recite those addition tables over and over. I need to some research for her!!

Our 2009-2010 Curriculum

Posted on : 04-08-2009 | By : Amber | In : Basic Skills, Health & Nutrition, History & Geography, Language Arts, Learning Games, Math, Our School

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The season is upon us. Not the holiday season, the back to school season! The get back on our school schedule, pull out the new school books, stock up on school supplies and no more sleeping in late season.

Not that we ever sleep in late around here. Ahem.

Typically speaking we take the month of August off after having schooled for the whole remainder of the year. This year, however, we’re still going and we’re doing a bit of something during the month of August to help transition into the new school year.

princessgogglessnorkel 257x300 Our 2009 2010 CurriculumPrincess, Age 9.3

We’re using the 4th Grade Brain Quest Workbook to transition from our 3rd grade curriculum last year to the 4th & 5th grade curriculum for this year. At the beginning of September we’ll begin our new year with the following curriculum:

dramaqueenswimming 258x300 Our 2009 2010 CurriculumDrama Queen, Age 6.3

We’re using the 1st Grade Brain Quest Workbook to both review some of the first grade concepts she began last year and also, pick up where she left off and practice the new concepts. Once she really gets the hang of reading, she’ll be able to move on:

littleprincepool 257x300 Our 2009 2010 Curriculum

Little Prince, Age 3.7

He also has a Brain Quest Workbook, Pre-K, and he’s doing some early pages out of that as his willingness and ability allows. Other than that his schooling will consist mainly of:

  • Learning to write some letters and his name.
  • Hands on play time with his blocks, animals and trains.
  • Watching Sid the Science Kid, SuperWhy and WordWorld. (Yeah, I just put cartoons down as school curriculum – so what?)
  • Playing his Caillou Thinking Skills and Caillou Alphabet games. I’d like to also get the Caillou Counting game.
  • Trying to play his Blue’s Clues Kingergarten game.
  • Keeping him from destroying school work by entertaining him with all of the above. icon wink Our 2009 2010 Curriculum

A lot of these have been given to us over the years, many of them have been passed down from child to child. Some of them I found on sale somewhere and many of them I hunted down specifically trying to find the best deal. I choose things based on how well they meet my goals for the child and often personal recommendations from friends but if it doesn’t work as well as I’d like or if I find something that looks better, we happily try something new next year. We’re very laid back that way. Well, when I say we, I mean “I.” My husband would prefer I was a little less laid back and so I’m working on that.

How is the upcoming year looking for you? How do you find and choose your curriculum? I’m interested to know.

This post is happily submitted to the NOT Back to School Blog Hop: Curriculum Week at Darcy’s My 3 Boybarians.

NBTSbloghop Our 2009 2010 Curriculum

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Cool Math 4 Kids

Posted on : 16-05-2009 | By : Amber | In : Learning Games, Math

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coolmath Cool Math 4 KidsEarlier today my 9 yr old asked me to find some new games online for her to play.

I countered with, “After you play Timez Attack for a little while.”

She scoffed but that was the deal, so that’s how it went down. icon wink Cool Math 4 Kids

After she’d practiced her multiplication facts for a little while I went online and sent her this link: http://www.coolmath4kids.com/.

To which her reply was: “Math? I meant a fun game.”

I encouraged her to click the link and try it and before you know it we were both trying our hand at the brain teasers. (I have to confess I couldn’t solve the Eight Queens or Bridge Crossing.)

From there Princess moved on to playing other math games – learning math and having enough fun she didn’t realize she was practicing her math skills.

Now THAT’S what I’m talkin’ ’bout.

Kids Wealth

Posted on : 06-05-2009 | By : Amber | In : Math

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“An easy and fun way to teach your kids about giving and sharing from a biblical perspective.” This free e-book has 28 pages of activities to teach your children to make smart money decisions. Get your free guide from Kids Wealth now.