[Photo by Alex Kehr.]
Welcome to the Math Teachers At Play blog carnival — which is not just for math teachers! If you like to learn new things and play around with ideas, you are sure to find something of interest. Let the mathematical fun begin…
[Photo by Alex Kehr.]
Welcome to the Math Teachers At Play blog carnival — which is not just for math teachers! If you like to learn new things and play around with ideas, you are sure to find something of interest. Let the mathematical fun begin…

[Photo by singsing_sky.]
The new math carnival is up and running at Homeschool Bytes:
There is a wide variety of articles, ranging from the “baby steps” of kindergarten math to the hurdle races of high school Check it out!
[Photo by Dominic.]
The carnival is up and running, with plenty of math fun for all ages:
Welcome to this installment of Math Teachers at Play! Three: It’s a Magic Number! …
Go check it out!
[Photo by Sister72.]
Welcome to the second Math Teachers At Play blog carnival! Some articles were submitted by their authors, other were drawn from the back-log in my blog reader, and I’ve spiced it all up with a few of my favorite quotations.
Let the mathematical fun begin…
[Photo by StuSeeger.]
Welcome to the inaugural edition of the Math Teachers At Play blog carnival! I hope you enjoy this collection of tips, tidbits, games, and activities for students and teachers of preschool-12th grade mathematics.
For this first carnival, I’ve drawn several recent posts from my blog reader as examples of the types of posts I’d love to include in future editions of Math Teachers at Play. I tried to find something for everyone, from multiplication drill for elementary students to advice for understanding high school math equations.
Let the mathematical fun begin…
Mark at Good Math, Bad Math came up with the most creative theme I’ve seen for a blog carnival yet, with his Carnival of Math: The Spam Edition. Apparently most of us have been too busy to send anything in. Even though it’s a small carnival, there are several good articles to visit. Enjoy!
Carnival of Math #18 was posted Saturday evening at JD2718. Jonathan has put together a tremendous list of 52 blog posts, with these instructions:
1) Scroll, 2) Click, 3) Enjoy, 4) Repeat.
It is too much to take in on a sleepy Sunday afternoon, but I know I have some great math reading to look forward to this week.
Edited to add: There is an addendum post, too. Enjoy!
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Dave at MathNotations was up early today posting the 17th Edition of the Carnival of Mathematics. 17 is sometimes called the most “random” number, although one (not very scientific) test has shown 3 to be even more “random.”
Did you know there are only 17 ways you can design wallpaper? The 17 Wallpaper Tilings has animations of each pattern.
The latest math carnival is up and running at Learning Computation.
This installment features articles about math education, posts by and about mathematicians, and some happenings in computer science. Plenty to enjoy!