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Building Math Skills at Home
- Play tic-tac-toe, dots, checkers,
dominoes, concentration, hangman, Scrabble, chess, and
increasingly complex card games such as hearts, rummy,
cribbage with your child. All involve problem solving
and logic, and all are based on mathematics.
- Skill in solving problems is one
of the goals of mathematical study. Ask your child to
show you how he or she goes about solving a word problem
in math. (Steps in the process might include trying to
understand the question, finding the pertinent
information, deciding what to do, working out the
answer, and checking the answer.)
- Ask your child to determine the
best way to solve the following problems, using a
calculator, paper and pencil, mental calculation, or
estimation:
- We have 12 shelves and we have
to put 40 cans on each shelf. How many cans will we
need?
- John works at a fast food
restaurant and makes $6 an hour. If he works 28
hours each week, how much will he earn in eight
weeks?
- A jogger runs 10 kilometers
each weekday and 15 kilometers each weekend day. How
many kilometers did the jogger run during the past
month? (Use your calendar to figure out the number
of weekdays and weekend days.)
- A sweatshirt store can print
four designs – A, B, X, and Y – on sweatshirts. Each
pattern can be printed alone or in combination with
any or all of the other designs. If you wanted to
own one of every possible design combination, how
many sweatshirts would you have to buy?
- With a map of the United States,
ask, "What is the shortest route from Princeton, New
Jersey, to San Francisco, California?" Or from Boston,
Massachusetts, to Madison, Wisconsin. Or have your child
figure out how long it would take to get to the homes of
relatives and friends around the country -- or the world
-- by plane, train, automobile, or on foot. When you
travel, make sure you involve your child in planning
travel routes.
- Ask, "How could we figure out how
tall our house is?" What about a local church, or the
school? Expect your child to come up with many
suggestions for figuring out the height.
- Make up problems. For example: "It
takes us 5 hours and 15 minutes to get to Aunt Siobhan's
house if we average 55 miles an hour. How long would it
take if we went 60 miles an hour? How about 50, or 45?"
- The calculator should be very
familiar to your child. Using a calculator, pick a
number such as 109, then take turns adding a number from
1 to 8 into the memory. The objective is to see who can
get to 109 first. This is a good mental math task and
also another way to use the calculator.
- Multiplying three-digit numbers.
You can think of the problem 422 x 396 in this way: 6 x
422, 90 x 422, and 300 x 422. Another way to visualize
it is: 422 396 2,532 (6x422) 37, 980 (90x422) 126,600
(300x422) 167,112.
- Have your child work out the
following problems (do them yourself at the same time
and compare your solutions with your child's): 508 x
183; 759 x 341; 192 x 546.
YOU ARE YOUR
CHILD’S BEST TEACHER

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