Vi Hart is back with some wintery fun!
Math Teachers at Play #57 via So I Teach Math and Coach?
From preschool through high school, mathematics offers a wide range of puzzles, games, and interesting ideas to explore. The Math Teachers at Play blog carnival brings you a variety of mathy treats every month. Check it out!
Welcome to the 57th Edition of Math Teachers at Play the Blog Carnival!
The number 57 has often been used in entertainment. As in Agent 57 from the Hit TV Show Danger Mouse, Bruce Springsteen once sang about 57 channels (and nothin’ on), and I can’t forget one of my favorite movies Passenger 57 staring Wesley Snipes.
Quotable: Why Study Algebra?
[Photo by AlphaTangoBravo / Adam Baker via flickr.]
One reason to study algebra: because it’s a building block. And just as it was really hard at first to get those blocks to do what you wanted them to do, so also it can be really hard at first to get algebra to work. But if you persevere, who knows what you might build someday?
Algebra is the beginning of a journey that gives you the skills to solve more complex problems.
…
So, try not to think of Algebra as a boring list of rules and procedures to memorize. Consider algebra as a gateway to exploring the world around us all.— Jason Gibson
Why Study Algebra?
Let’s Play Math Book Update
I love math, but had forgotten why I developed a love for math in the first place. This book made me realize how experiences in my childhood lit a spark in me … Denise Gaskins shows us how we can ignite this fire in our own children.
I believe her suggestions are invaluable for homeschoolers, but essential for the many parents whose children are learning to dislike math in school.
If you’ve wavered on whether to pick up my math book, be warned: This is the last month for the introductory sale price. In January, the ebook price will go up to $5.99.
A Mathematical Advent Calendar
It’s always a challenge to keep up with homeschooling during the holiday season, but here’s a wonderful way to weave mathematics into your daily schedule: The Nrich Advent Calendars offer a fun math game or activity for every day in December until Christmas Eve. Click the image to visit the calendar that fits your student’s level.
Advent Calendar 2012 – Primary
Advent Calendar 2012 – Secondary
Welcome, TIME Readers!
[Photo by Luis Argerich via flickr.]
If you’ve come here from Bonnie Rochman’s article, Bedtime Math: A Problem a Day Keeps Fear of Arithmetic Away, thank you for dropping in! I have nearly 800 published posts about learning and teaching math, which can seem pretty overwhelming.
Here are a few good places to start:
- Tell Me a (Math) Story
What better way could there be to do math than snuggled up on a couch with your little one, or side by side at the sink while your middle-school student helps you wash the dishes, or passing the time on a car ride into town?
- Homeschooling with Math Anxiety Series
Our childhood struggles with schoolwork gave most of us a warped view of mathematics. Yet even parents who suffer from math anxiety can learn to enjoy math with their children.
- 20 Best Math Games and Puzzles
Arithmetic games for elementary and middle school students, and geometric puzzles for middle and high school.
- How to Conquer the Times Table
Challenge your student to a joint experiment in mental math. Over the next two months, without flashcards or memory drill, how many math facts can the two of you learn together? We will use the world’s oldest interactive game — conversation — to explore multiplication patterns while memorizing as little as possible.
I hope you enjoy your visit to my blog.
Have a Mathy Thanksgiving Dinner
Professional Mathemusician Vi Hart is back with more mathematical holiday fun. Enjoy!
Optimal Potatoes
Green Bean Matherole
Borromean Onion Rings
Thanksgiving Turduckenen-duckenen
Math Teachers at Play #56 via Another Step To Take…
Would you like to learn about math books, games, puzzles, teaching tips, and more? Check out this month’s Math Teachers at Play:
Math Teachers at Play is a Blog Carnival for teachers, parents, homeschoolers and anyone else interested in learning and teaching mathematics.
According to the tradition of MTaP we start with some trivia related to edition number. Fifty six is a tetrahedral number, the sum of the first six triangular numbers. To model this number we laid out tiles to for the triangular numbers and then stacked them…
10 Questions to Ask About a Math Problem
[Photo by CourtneyCarmody via flickr.]
It’s important to teach our children to ask questions, about math and about life. As I wrote in my series about homeschooling with math anxiety, “School textbooks only ask questions for which they know the answer. When homeschoolers learn to think like mathematicians, we will ask a different type of question.”
So I was delighted to see this new post from Bon Crowder: Ten Questions to Ask About a Math Problem. Click the link and read the whole thing!
Why a list of questions about math problems? Before creating them, I decided the questions should do the following:
- Allow the student to dig in deeper to the math problem, and the math behind the problem.
- Help the student to think about the problem in ways they wouldn’t normally.
- Let the student get creative in thinking about the problem.
And of course doing these things regularly will train them to continue to do this with all math problems through their lives.
— Bon Crowder
Ten Questions to Ask About a Math Problem
Poll: Math Ebooks?
Two of my daughters are attempting NaNoWriMo this year. So I’m thinking I might keep them company and give the EBookWriMo Challenge a try. What topic should I write about?
Don’t like any of my ideas? Enter your suggestion in the poll, or leave a comment below!







