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Starter Of The Day. How Japanese Kids Learn To Multiply – Amazing, No Need to Learn Japanese. Thank you to everyone who has shared this post!

How Japanese Kids Learn To Multiply – Amazing, No Need to Learn Japanese

Before we discuss this great method of multiplying numbers, if you are after a great power point slide show to use in the classroom to improve times tables and multiplication skills then you will find this useful. If you enjoyed using the resource above then make sure to check out the games and tricks available to help develop, practice and learn times tables skills. Teaching Common Core Math with iPads. Singapore Maths: Our Journey to Excellence Singapore Maths: Our Journey to Excellence › An overview of Longley's implementation of Singapore Maths.

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Learn Magic Tricks-Street Magic Training at Ellusionist. How To Do Street Magic. Murderous Maths: Tricks and Games! Do you want to be a mind reader?

Murderous Maths: Tricks and Games!

Or maybe have a brain that does lightning calculations? Or maybe you just want to make your friends feel silly! Here are a few of my sneakiest tricks, and don't worry - you don't need to be a maths genius to do them! Some of these tricks are in the Murderous Maths books, but here I can let you play on my special calculators and other computer gadgets! The Fiendish Football Team Illusion! Let Riverboat Lil READ YOUR MIND! The EIGHT QUEENS Puzzle! The 7-11-13 Trick (And other miracle sums) Pass your friends a calculator - and then make them feel really silly with these simple tricks!

The Predictor Cards The trick with four cut-out cards, you pick a number from 1-16 and it mysteriously appears in a hole at the back! The Missing Digit Trick Your friend does a sum then crosses a digit out - you can tell what it is without looking! The Prime Numbers Trick Make a strange prediciton using the magic of PRIME NUMBERS. What were you like when you were born? Welcome to A Maths Dictionary for Kids 2011 by Jenny Eather. Math, PBL and 21st Century Learning for All Students.

Considering project-based learning as a way to teach 21st century competencies?

Math, PBL and 21st Century Learning for All Students

Or perhaps you have already used PBL in your schools and want support for your discussions with administrators, parents or board members? In either case, it might be helpful to know about the strong research evidence that PBL, when supported by good professional development, can in turn support the teaching and learning of 21st century skills significantly better than more traditional alternatives.

Sometimes skeptics will argue that for certain subjects (e.g., math) or some types of students (e.g., lower performers) are harder to teach using PBL. They might enjoy this video of students building a house as an example of good teaching -- but not necessarily an example that could or should be followed. Others, such as Paul Lockhart in his Mathematician's Lament, suggest that applying math to real world situations could actually hurt creativity.

Evidence from West Virginia. The Thirty Greatest Mathematicians. Click for a discussion of certain omissions.

The Thirty Greatest Mathematicians

Please send me e-mail if you believe there's a major flaw in my rankings (or an error in any of the biographies). Obviously the relative ranks of, say Fibonacci and Ramanujan, will never satisfy everyone since the reasons for their "greatness" are different. I'm sure I've overlooked great mathematicians who obviously belong on this list. Please e-mail and tell me! Following are the top mathematicians in chronological (birth-year) order. Earliest mathematicians Little is known of the earliest mathematics, but the famous Ishango Bone from Early Stone-Age Africa has tally marks suggesting arithmetic. Early Vedic mathematicians The greatest mathematics before the Golden Age of Greece was in India's early Vedic (Hindu) civilization. Top Thales of Miletus (ca 624 - 546 BC) Greek domain Apastambha (ca 630-560 BC) India Pythagoras of Samos (ca 578-505 BC) Greek domain.

How to Deal With Kids’ Math Anxiety. Flickr: Grisha By Annie Murphy Paul In children with math anxiety, seeing numbers on a page stimulates the same part of the brain that would respond if they spotted a slithering snake or a creeping spider—math is that scary.

How to Deal With Kids’ Math Anxiety

Brain scans of these children also show that when they’re in the grip of math anxiety, activity is reduced in the information-processing and reasoning areas of their brains—exactly the regions that should be working hard to figure out the problems in front of them. These new findings, published this month in the journal Psychological Science, demonstrate that math anxiety is real and can’t simply be wished away. But there are specific exercises that have been shown to reduce students’ nervousness and allow them to focus on their work without the powerful distraction of fear. Special Education Math Teaching Strategies. Download Interactive Primary Resources. Try a free 60 day trial of the new online whole school maths homework service Developed with Carol Vorderman and Pearson , Maths Made Easy delivers an online learning environment with weekly maths homeworks created to allow pupils of every ability level to practise their key maths skills, embed them, and most importantly enjoy learning them.

Download Interactive Primary Resources

Powered by Carol Vorderman’s themathsfactor.com, Maths Made Easy is designed to make setting and marking homework quick and easy so you can spend time on what you do best, teaching. The service is built around an interactive platform that allows you to set homeworks for any number of classes in a school, have them completed by your pupils and automatically marked. A typical homework consists of: An introductory video presented by Carol VordermanA warm-up game or practice activityA marked and timed activity Engaging parents and guardians Maths Made Easy also gives parents the opportunity to interact with their children’s learning like never before.

How to deal with upper boys? Planning a premiership football lesson? Maths Busking – Maths Busking Official Video. Amazing Maths Trick: How anyone can square very big numbers in your head in seconds? How to calculate 104 squared in your head in 5 seconds?

Amazing Maths Trick: How anyone can square very big numbers in your head in seconds?

This is an Amazing Maths Trick and shows how anyone can square very big numbers in your head in seconds? This is a great Maths trick that you can share with your Maths classes or pupils and get them to be able to do very challenging maths questions mentally in seconds. I have used this as a great plenary to a lesson on square numbers and the learners have left the classroom amazed that they can do some awesome mathematics so quickly! Anyone can do this so this is even accessible for lower sets and the results are remarkable. I have embedded a video below showing an explanation just in case the worded version is not clear enough.

Maths - Carol Vorderman's homework help - Dorling Kindersley. How to combine maths and poetry in your class. Scotland's Curriculum for Excellence places responsibility for promoting the development of numeracy skills on all classroom teachers, rather than leaving such nefarious wizardry solely to the maths department.

How to combine maths and poetry in your class

This is an admirable aim but at first glance causes mild panic for us artsy fartsy teachers of English. I've heard some say that numeracy skills can be boosted in the English classroom simply by directing pupils towards a particular page number in a novel, but I can't say I agree. Certainly, there seem to be fewer opportunities to build numeracy skills in English than in, say, science or computing classes. Nevertheless we can surely go beyond the basic task of finding a page number. One answer lies in the French literary movement known as Oulipo (its full title is ouvroir de littérature potentielle, which translates roughly as 'workshop of potential literature').

There are a few exercises which can be used successfully in schools, however. Download Alan's Oulipo resource here. Math Fluency. 19 Nov Math instruction has come to life in my classroom thanks to apps that allow my students to work together, create podcasts and identify factor pairs.

Math Fluency

Students of all ages need to be fast with their math facts in order to be successful. Here are three math fact apps that are great for practicing fluency: Maths questioning grid. Millennium Mathematics Project. As part of our intention to promote the enjoyment of mathematics, we developed the NRICH Hands-On Maths Roadshow.

Millennium Mathematics Project

The Hands-On Maths Roadshow is a collection of hands-on mathematical puzzles, games and activities that can be brought by our Schools Liaison Officer, Frances Watson, to schools for a special maths event. Roadshow activities are designed to promote creative approaches to mathematics and strategic thinking and to stimulate mathematical curiosity (click here for more detail on the pedagogical thinking behind the Roadshow).

The activities are taken from ideas on the NRICH website translated into physical form and teachers are encouraged to use the visit as a source of rich tasks for the classroom.

Maths apps and resources

- StumbleUpon. This is a great video showing how we could possibly improve the teaching of Mathematics! A great watch! “Time for our Mathematics to change from Analog to Digital!” Someone always asks the Math teacher, “Am I going to use calculus in real life?” And for most of us, says Arthur Benjamin, the answer is no.