Browsed by
Tag: family math night activities

CCSS: Teaching Area in Third Grade

CCSS: Teaching Area in Third Grade

My son came home with this project in the third grade and I thought it was brilliant! But then, I was reminded of his third grade teacher, Mrs. Durbin, and it made sense. She understands how to teach mathematics effectively and is always doing fun, hands-on activities and projects with her students. For this project, Mrs. Durbin was working with her students on the concept of area. Students created a design on inch graph paper and then indicated the total…

Read More Read More

Number Theory: Square Numbers

Number Theory: Square Numbers

Making rectangular arrays with tiles is a great visual way to have students understand multiplication as repeated addition. And since we’re making arrays anyway, why not tie in square numbers. A square number is: 1) A number that can be expressed as the product of the same two numbers. 2) The product of a number multiplied by itself. When making rectangluar arrays, square nuumbers (1, 4, 9, 16…) always make a square. Besides, there are some very neat patterns that…

Read More Read More

Family Math Night School Banner

Family Math Night School Banner

Wouldn’t it be fun to see that banner hanging in front of your school? It would be a great way to remind parents of your Nifty Numbers or Math Medley Family Math Night event. And the banner is FREE. As a special back-to-school offer, we are including the Family Math Night banner with every kit we sell for the entire month of September. We custom-designed the banner to include a dry erase area for you to personalize the date, time,…

Read More Read More

PomPom Fractions – A CCSS Activity for Third, Fourth and Fifth Graders

PomPom Fractions – A CCSS Activity for Third, Fourth and Fifth Graders

Recent research points to a students’ early understanding of fractions as critical for later success in mathematics. We need to give our students plenty of hands-on experiences with fraction concepts along with meaningful dialogue about what they are learning. The photo above is an example of developing the idea that fractional parts of a whole unit need to be equal in size. If you feel the colors of the pom poms will get in the way of learning, supply students…

Read More Read More