Children & Math

2

Replies

  • singer201
    singer201 Posts: 563 Member
    I used "Math-It" by Elmer Brooks to teach and drill my homeschooled daughters (who had very different learning styles) in addition, subtraction, and multiplication. The book teaches the "tricks" to help the child figure out the answers, and the game provides practice and improves speed. It's not computer-based, and not cheap, but google it, and several come up on Ebay for about half price.
  • Izzy62
    Izzy62 Posts: 62 Member
    In our school we use "Mathletics", it is a British website but is used worldwide. The kids love it because they can either challenge themselves or they can play against other children around the world. It is completely safe, they just see a flag indicating which country the other children are from and I believe the name of the school. They cannot speak directly to each other. The boys in particular love the competition element.
  • socalkay
    socalkay Posts: 746 Member
    Multiplication station (online game)
    http://www.freemathhelp.com/multiplication-station.html
  • IPAkiller
    IPAkiller Posts: 711 Member
    When I grew up we didn't have a PC/Laptop, Wii or Kindle Fire. However, my parents did have a game that helped me learn. I was a little game called, "Do your effing homework till every problem is right and hand that ish into the teacher tomorrow or we'll beat your buns purple". I tried to register this game with Parker Brothers a few years back but they declined saying the title wouldn't fit on the box cover and no one would understand the acronym, "DYFHTEPIRAHTSITTTOWBYBP".


    spanking.jpg
  • Organicgasm
    Organicgasm Posts: 592 Member
    Number munchers! Yes!

    No suggestions. We love math here.
  • Lumpy52403
    Lumpy52403 Posts: 187 Member
    I agree with those who have already suggested associating sports with math. Consider also showing him how math is involved in cooking (measurement). Boys love practical, hands-on applications.
  • melissay28
    melissay28 Posts: 100 Member
    How old is he? If he's close to my sons age I will look because I'm sure we will need them soon enough! My son started learning last year, in second grade, and had the hardest time because the teacher blew thru the lessons (first day brought home homework with all 1-12x problems then the next week it was on to division). Needless to say his motivation to do the lessons wasn't there, and I don't blame him!
  • odusgolp
    odusgolp Posts: 10,477 Member
    When I grew up we didn't have a PC/Laptop, Wii or Kindle Fire. However, my parents did have a game that helped me learn. I was a little game called, "Do your effing homework till every problem is right and hand that ish into the teacher tomorrow or we'll beat your buns purple". I tried to register this game with Parker Brothers a few years back but they declined saying the title wouldn't fit on the box cover and no one would understand the acronym, "DYFHTEPIRAHTSITTTOWBYBP".


    spanking.jpg

    Our parenting styles differ drastically.
  • odusgolp
    odusgolp Posts: 10,477 Member
    How old is he? If he's close to my sons age I will look because I'm sure we will need them soon enough! My son started learning last year, in second grade, and had the hardest time because the teacher blew thru the lessons (first day brought home homework with all 1-12x problems then the next week it was on to division). Needless to say his motivation to do the lessons wasn't there, and I don't blame him!

    He just turned 8 and started 3rd grade last week.
  • Cliffslosinit
    Cliffslosinit Posts: 5,044 Member
    Put them up for adoption and make new ones, win win!

    335e8n4.jpg
  • Begood03
    Begood03 Posts: 1,259 Member
    When I grew up we didn't have a PC/Laptop, Wii or Kindle Fire. However, my parents did have a game that helped me learn. I was a little game called, "Do your effing homework till every problem is right and hand that ish into the teacher tomorrow or we'll beat your buns purple". I tried to register this game with Parker Brothers a few years back but they declined saying the title wouldn't fit on the box cover and no one would understand the acronym, "DYFHTEPIRAHTSITTTOWBYBP".


    spanking.jpg
    That's how it was at my parents house also.
  • Since he is such an active child, in my humble opinion, a game might not be the answer.... can you devise a way to combine the math and with sports stats or part of physical games that he plays. Perhaps keep track of how many goals are scored on his team and have him use Player A and Player B, etc etc to multiply their scores. I have a math challenged child and he is very into cooking / helping in the kitchen. We learn our multiplication and division that way. Example: (As I'm cutting bell pepper) If I take these three strips of bell pepper and cut them into 4 pieces each, how many pieces will I have.... wait for his answer.... show him how it's done by cutting. Some children find a tangible experience helpful.

    I like it.

    ^^^This is a great idea. Also I would suggest (just a suggestion) taking a look at the "Errorless Learning Process". Introduced by B.F Skinner and helps build confidence in learners who are less enthused or have difficulty learning in the traditional manner. I think it's great you are trying to find new ways to help the little man. Good luck :-)
  • tomomatic
    tomomatic Posts: 1,794 Member
    abcmouse.com but I think it's way too simple.
  • 777Gemma888
    777Gemma888 Posts: 9,578 Member
    My son is learning multiplication and division in school this year. He's the type of boy that just doesn't dig school, he digs sports and competition (if he wins, that is). I loved school and academics, so I'm struggling with his constant whine over homework and lack of desire to try and get decent grades. This is foreign territory to me.

    So, any suggestions welcome, but what I'm really looking for are math games that might help and are somewhat challenging... we have:

    PC/Laptop
    Wii
    Kindle Fire

    So any games that might work on these devices or internet based, I'd love to hear about. Google brings back so many results it's hard to fish through.

    I have workbooks, flashcards, and what-not, but I think a game might engage him a little more.

    Most of us grew up at a time when we were simply handed the table, from 1 to 18 and were told, "Learn your 2s to 4s today and you'll be rewarded with x." For me my reward was in the form of one movie over the weekend. If I'd learnt 2 to 8 I'd get to choose 2 movies plus my chocolate and my cup-a-joy. Today it's a lot different. Adjustments and sensitivity with approach need to be taken into consideration, to suit the child.

    I'm all for games except I've noticed that when a game is specifically designed for Learning it can sometimes borrow from the fun element. They're not designing them like they'd done with "Carmen Sandiego" or "Sail the Endeavour" for Geography say. It has to be fun, sporty and practical life learning in design for a young impressionable child to enjoy.

    Does your son like cooking with you or does he like to make protein bars with you? You can involve him when you're making the big batches; Give him an overly simplified to serve one recipe and as you're working through, kind of throw it at him, "If you need this to serve 10 people how much more of x do you think we'll need to add?" I've noticed that boys prefer practical + sports Mathematics. I don't rightly know how into the Fantasy Sports or the Professional or College sports you and your husband are, but would either of you be willing to use Sporting averages and Games or even the Sports Video Games as a Learning Tool; As in customise it to him ~ His favourite sports, his favourite players, his favourite positions, his favourite plays, the players' earnings (inc forecast and starting, pre professional).

    I wasn't so into American Sports when I'd arrived to understand "the Maths in the Game" element, but I'd had to with a friend's child, who was 7 at the time. I didn't use Sports but I'd used Zoo Tycoon and Park Tycoon. He loved the idea of taking over and besting his father's business ~ A mogul in-training as his Mum called him. Using the Wall Street Games for children was too complex at the time for him, so Zoo Tycoon + the Bionicles it was, where Bionicles was the treat + Ben-10 ROFL As he'd played the Game, I'd use his real time play screen and I'd shoot a Mathematics Question at him. Surprisingly, he knew the correct answer because he was relaxed and at ease enough with himself, in his comfort zone. And if you're going to use repetition for grounds yet to be covered, as in the foundations, the basics of Mathematics ~ Division & Multiplication, use rote but be creative each time, so he can remember, where he is not to feel academically-challenged because he is not; It's the approach to it in the classroom that has failed him. He is to not know that you're being rote about it, via your approach at repetition swot/cram-methods.

    When you approach it using what they know and love, it'll work. He'll absorb it all ~ Parents make the best tutors.
  • odusgolp
    odusgolp Posts: 10,477 Member
    My son is learning multiplication and division in school this year. He's the type of boy that just doesn't dig school, he digs sports and competition (if he wins, that is). I loved school and academics, so I'm struggling with his constant whine over homework and lack of desire to try and get decent grades. This is foreign territory to me.

    So, any suggestions welcome, but what I'm really looking for are math games that might help and are somewhat challenging... we have:

    PC/Laptop
    Wii
    Kindle Fire

    So any games that might work on these devices or internet based, I'd love to hear about. Google brings back so many results it's hard to fish through.

    I have workbooks, flashcards, and what-not, but I think a game might engage him a little more.

    Most of us grew up at a time when we were simply handed the table, from 1 to 18 and were told, "Learn your 2s to 4s today and you'll be rewarded with x." For me my reward was in the form of one movie over the weekend. If I'd learnt 2 to 8 I'd get to choose 2 movies plus my chocolate and my cup-a-joy. Today it's a lot different. Adjustments and sensitivity with approach need to be taken into consideration, to suit the child.

    I'm all for games except I've noticed that when a game is specifically designed for Learning it can sometimes borrow from the fun element. They're not designing them like they'd done with "Carmen Sandiego" or "Sail the Endeavour" for Geography say. It has to be fun, sporty and practical life learning in design for a young impressionable child to enjoy.

    Does your son like cooking with you or does he like to make protein bars with you? You can involve him when you're making the big batches; Give him an overly simplified to serve one recipe and as you're working through, kind of throw it at him, "If you need this to serve 10 people how much more of x do you think we'll need to add?" I've noticed that boys prefer practical + sports Mathematics. I don't rightly know how into the Fantasy Sports or the Professional or College sports you and your husband are, but would either of you be willing to use Sporting averages and Games or even the Sports Video Games as a Learning Tool; As in customise it to him ~ His favourite sports, his favourite players, his favourite positions, his favourite plays, the players' earnings (inc forecast and starting, pre professional).

    I wasn't so into American Sports when I'd arrived to understand "the Maths in the Game" element, but I'd had to with a friend's child, who was 7 at the time. I didn't use Sports but I'd used Zoo Tycoon and Park Tycoon. He loved the idea of taking over and besting his father's business ~ A mogul in-training as his Mum called him. Using the Wall Street Games for children was too complex at the time for him, so Zoo Tycoon + the Bionicles it was, where Bionicles was the treat + Ben-10 ROFL As he'd played the Game, I'd use his real time play screen and I'd shoot a Mathematics Question at him. Surprisingly, he knew the correct answer because he was relaxed and at ease enough with himself, in his comfort zone. And if you're going to use repetition for grounds yet to be covered, as in the foundations, the basics of Mathematics ~ Division & Multiplication, use rote but be creative each time, so he can remember, where he is not to feel academically-challenged because he is not; It's the approach to it in the classroom that has failed him. He is to not know that you're being rote about it, via your approach at repetition swot/cram-methods.

    When you approach it using what they know and love, it'll work. He'll absorb it all ~ Parents make the best tutors.

    Thank you for the reply! Will definitely get my creative thinking cap on... (I'm not so good at that, but will try :)

    He loves cooking with me as well, so everyone that suggested that was right on the money!
  • IPAkiller
    IPAkiller Posts: 711 Member
    FYI... No "learning game" has EVER been fun and loved by kids. EVER!. There is an actual reason for this. It is because kids don't play games because they enjoy the game itself. They play them because their friends play them and because tv tells them to play them. Seriously, look at how epically STOOOOOPID these kids games are these days. If "Monkey Math" was a Japanimation cartoon with a clothing and toy line that used unintelligible words and sounds of nonsense, our effing kids would be taking precalc in 4th grade.
  • Be11adonna
    Be11adonna Posts: 55 Member
    Bump
  • Liftng4Lis
    Liftng4Lis Posts: 15,151 Member
    Put them up for adoption and make new ones, win win!
    OMG Hysterical!
    Seriously, she's way surpassed me, I use to make her explain to me how to do it so I could check her homework. Flipping forget that Sh**!
  • aliakynes
    aliakynes Posts: 352 Member
    http://xtramath.org focuses on memorization and speed. If you take too long on a problem or get it wrong, you'll get the same problem again a few times (sometimes mixed with other problems) but enough to hopefully memorize it. My son thought he was gaming the program when he realized this, lol. There are also challenges to see how many items you can get right in a row and then attempt to beat your score the next time around. My son didn't like how much time I made him spend on it but he did get excited whenever he earned a new high score.

    It also gives parents a report on how much time was spent playing and how much they have improved over time.
  • MMarvelous
    MMarvelous Posts: 1,067 Member
    My kids are freaking weirdos and do math for fun. There's online "work book" sort of things. IXL.com is one. You could have a reward system for him after he completes so many exercises.

    Ohh.. another website is www.coolmath-games.com. It's actually games that the kids play.

    Good luck to you!!! And I'm glad I read the topic wrong and it wasn't "Children & Meth".

    I am a WEIRDO KID! I love math LOL
  • CJisinShape
    CJisinShape Posts: 1,404 Member
    How old is he? If he's close to my sons age I will look because I'm sure we will need them soon enough! My son started learning last year, in second grade, and had the hardest time because the teacher blew thru the lessons (first day brought home homework with all 1-12x problems then the next week it was on to division). Needless to say his motivation to do the lessons wasn't there, and I don't blame him!

    He just turned 8 and started 3rd grade last week.

    What? Is he young for grade 3?
  • How old is he? If he's close to my sons age I will look because I'm sure we will need them soon enough! My son started learning last year, in second grade, and had the hardest time because the teacher blew thru the lessons (first day brought home homework with all 1-12x problems then the next week it was on to division). Needless to say his motivation to do the lessons wasn't there, and I don't blame him!

    He just turned 8 and started 3rd grade last week.

    What? Is he young for grade 3?

    No. My son is 10 and in fifth grade....so that would be right.

    www.coolmath.com is a great one to try! We use it as teachers in our school and my son uses it at home.
  • George_Baileys_Ghost
    George_Baileys_Ghost Posts: 1,524 Member
    Math ≠ Meth.

    post-8766-YEAH-SCIENCE-Breaking-Bad-gif-og7N.gif
  • odusgolp
    odusgolp Posts: 10,477 Member
    How old is he? If he's close to my sons age I will look because I'm sure we will need them soon enough! My son started learning last year, in second grade, and had the hardest time because the teacher blew thru the lessons (first day brought home homework with all 1-12x problems then the next week it was on to division). Needless to say his motivation to do the lessons wasn't there, and I don't blame him!

    He just turned 8 and started 3rd grade last week.

    What? Is he young for grade 3?

    He is actually the youngest in his class. Most people start kids born Sept 1st or after, but we started him just a couple of weeks earlier... August 16 is his birthday. He was ready, though. He was reading at age 3 and math at age 4. His "daycare/school" was really amazing when he was little and holding him back an extra year would have only hurt him.

    Intellectually, he's actually right on track. Emotionally, however, he's a little "behind." Easily breaks down if he gets something wrong or feels he's being teased. He's a sensitive one.
  • 2BeHappy2
    2BeHappy2 Posts: 811 Member
    Put them up for adoption and make new ones, win win!
    :noway: :laugh: :wink: :tongue:
  • rowlandsw
    rowlandsw Posts: 1,166 Member
    Oh the epic fights we had here when it came to math. It was never my strong suit, not helped by the school thinking I was slow and putting me in remedial math classes when i was just bored, and i'd raise all kinds of hell when it came to doing math or flash cards. Fast forward to 2007 when i was getting evaluated for SSI and it shows a slight...developmental issue that was the cause of my issues with math. Turns out I managed to graduate high school with barely a 5th grade math level. Sometimes there's things behind them not wanting to do the math. Problem is the schools are in such a hurry to pass them on to the next grade they tend to ignore the issues to keep the money coming in.
  • Anahita_Swims
    Anahita_Swims Posts: 4,127 Member
    << maths teacher :)

    maths isnt fun unless your interest in it and you like solving challenges .

    unfortunately lots of early maths requires a lot of repitiion for people who are weaker at in

    I really recommend times tables rockstars https://ttrockstars.com/ its truely epic :)

    you could makes chore work points and points could be traded in for prizes

    mymaths.co.uk is a good tool but i find it doesnt have enough repetition.

    mangahigh is good for games but might be a bit hard at the moment :)

    i teach highschoolers so grade 3 isnt my area of expertises tbh i recomend by a work book and work from front to back and give rewards for completion points there has to be and end as well so like when you complete the work book no maths at home fore a month
  • mjpTennis
    mjpTennis Posts: 6,165 Member
    Yahtzee.
  • tiggerhammon
    tiggerhammon Posts: 2,211 Member
    How old is he? If he's close to my sons age I will look because I'm sure we will need them soon enough! My son started learning last year, in second grade, and had the hardest time because the teacher blew thru the lessons (first day brought home homework with all 1-12x problems then the next week it was on to division). Needless to say his motivation to do the lessons wasn't there, and I don't blame him!

    He just turned 8 and started 3rd grade last week.

    What? Is he young for grade 3?

    My daughter is also 8 and started 3rd.
    Her biggest thing is she has to understand the 'why.' You can't just tell her that 8x4=32. You have to explain to her what x means, how to multiply and why the answer is 32. Once she completely gets how to do it and how it works, she then wants to figure out every problem herself. THEN we can work on memorization.

    Also, the biggest thing that helps be sure she totally gasrped the concept is to have her try to teach it. I have her sit down and teach my nephew, who is in 2nd grade. If he understands what she is saying, I know she fully gets it.

    I have a list of over 100 different learning websites and apps. Let me find it ...