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Math Homework Tips For Parents Nov. 19, 2015 Welcome! Please sign in on the sign in sheet before we begin. Why don’t we teach math the way we learned it? We want to develop mathematical thinkers and problem solvers. We want students to have a deeper understanding of math, what the value of the numbers mean, and how the numbers and concepts work. Math is flexible and there are multiple ways to find the answer. Rote memorization will only get you so far. Throughout each grade level we are trying to move kids from concrete to abstract problem solving. Look for some of these math concepts when finding games or websites: Word Problems for: addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, number patterns, shape patterns, algebra, geometry, graphs, elapsed time, weight, measurement, capacity, and fractions (including mixed numbers, improper fractions, equivalent fractions, largest/smallest fractions, 1/3 of 12, etc). Ten More Ten Less Counting in units of ten Counting ten less and ten more and 100 more and 100 less for addition and subtraction to 1,000. See thousands chart handout. Teaching kids how to count by tens is important to understand values of numbers. *Hundreds boards, thousands chart, or see below for place value. Ways to Make 100 Ways to Make 10 Ways to Make 100 Other Combinations of 100: 1+9 10+90 76+24 2+8 20+80 51+49 3+7 30+70 42+58 4+6 40+60 ? 5+5 50+50 ? 6+4 60+40 ? 7+3 70+30 ? 8+2 80+20 ? 9+1 90+10 ? Be sure to look at the TENS place and try to get to 90. Then, look at the ONES place and try to get to 10. (90 +10 = 100) Close to 100 Game- Choose what is in the tens place to equal 90. Choose numbers to equal 10 in the ones place. 4 2 + 34 5 8 = 100 + 6 5 = 99 *Rounding to the Nearest Ten: Multiples of ten: 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100, 110, 120, 130, 140 etc. Look in the ones place. If it is 5 or more, round up to the next multiple of ten. If it is less than 5, round down to the nearest multiple of ten. Example: 43 ~ 40 -l------l----------------l---------------------------l- 40 43 45 50 *Rounding to the Nearest Hundred: Multiples of 100: 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1100, 1200, etc. Look in the tens place. If it is 5 or more, round up to the next multiple of 100. If it is less than 5, round down to the nearest multiple of 100. Example: 268 ~ 300 -l----------------------------l--------l------------------------l-- 200 250 268 300 Students may also be asked to estimate to the nearest 10 or nearest 100 when adding or subtracting in their math problems. Use these phrases to help kids know what operation to use in word problems: Key Words in Math Word Problems ADD~ If you read: MULTIPLY~ If you read: sum product multiples of… total times all together (or altogether) twice plus total in all multiplied by both What is the area of… How many combined? Groups of… What is the sum? What is the product? SUBTRACT~ If you read: What is the difference? less than How many less? How many fewer? How many more? How many are left? How much change? How much taller is? How much shorter is? Minus give away take away (or took away) DIVIDE~ If you read: remainder quotient goes into split equally each How many per… What are the factors? Shared among… Divide ___ into parts equal parts What is the quotient? See parent handout on addition and subtraction strategies for the following slides. Parents can help kids with math addition fluency: Make 10 Combinations 9+1, 1+9=10 6+4=10 2+8=10 7+3=10 3+7=10 8+2=10 4+6=10 9+1=10 5+5=10 Doubles 1+1=2 2+2=4 3+3=6 4+4=8 5+5=10 Near Doubles (+1 or -1) Ex. 5+5=10, so… 5+6=11 (+1) Ex. 6+6=12, so… 6+5=11 (-1) Plus 10 Combinations 10+1=11 10+6=16 10+2=12 10+7=17 10+3=13 10+8=18 10+4=14 10+9=19 10+5=15 10+10=20 Plus 9 Combinations 9+1=10 9+6=15 9+2=11 9+7=16 9+3=12 9+8=17 9+4=13 9+5=14 Remaining Combos: (+2 or -2) (near 10) Ex. 5+3=8 6+3=9 5+7=12 6+6=12 7+7=14 8+8=16 9+9=18 Addition Strategies: Adding By Place (Breaking Apart): 46 + 74 = ___ 40 + 70 = 110 First, I added the tens. 6 + 4 = 10 Then, I added the ones. 110 + 10 = 120 Last, I put the tens and the ones together=120 (A little art lesson: red + blue = purple) • Use number strings: *Only for adding, not subtracting. 46 + 74 = 110 120 10 “Sticks and Stones” - for younger grades. Students can use drawings to add numbers together. Students use a square to represent 100, a line or “stick” to represent 10 and a dot to represent 1. This is a pencil and paper method of solving problems without cubes. Can use sticks and stones with subtraction. Drawing with sheets (100), strips (10), and singles (1): 46 + 74 = llll ::: lllllll :: 110+10 = 120 *Draw below: *We use algorithms to “Stack and Regroup”: 11 46 + 74 120 Here’s my thinking: 6 + 4 =10, so I put a 0 in the ones column and carry my group of 10 (1) to the tens column. Then I add 1 ten (10) + 4 tens (40) + 7 tens (70) = 12 tens (or 120). So I write my 2 (20) in the tens column and write the 1 (100) in the hundreds column to equal 120 as my answer. *Sometimes you can use this as a way to double check your answer. *Use a Hundreds Board: 10 more each time Equation: 46 + 74 = X 46 10 56 10 66 10 76 10 86 10 96 10 106 10 116 1 more each time 117 1 118 1 119 1 120 1 Students start at 46, then add 7 tens by going down 7 tens, landing on 116. Then they add 4 ones by going to the right 4 places, ending on 120. X=120 Hundreds Board and Number Line- Subtraction The number line has transformed student success with subtraction. When students solve subtraction problems they can simply turn the subtraction problem into addition! 203- 85=____ Why subtract when you can add? 85+_____ =203 Break Apart By Place: 1. Write equation. Example: 93 – 5 8 = ______ <35 is the answer. 93 – 50 = 43 43 – 8 = 35 * *Use the entire number 93 and break away the value of the tens place. Subtract from that answer the value of the ones place. Number line: 1. Write equation. 93 – 58 = _______ 30 <35 is the answer. + 5 = 35 ---l--------------------------l--------------------l---- 58 88 93 • To help with homework, have students highlight or underline key words and what the problem is asking. • Teach your kids to read very carefully. Often, problems have more than 1 step to find the correct answer. Math Homework #3- Sub. *Use either the Break Name:___________ #:_______ Date:_____ Apart strategy or the Number Line strategy. You may double check with the algorithm (stacking) if you choose. Write the equation and show how you solved it. *Please see reverse side for the strategies for sub. 1. There are 63 pencils in the drawer. Dan took 20 pencils out of the drawer. How many pencils are left in the drawer? Types of Graphs Example of a Survey Example of a Bar Graph Be sure to look at the key on graphs; some symbols are more than 1. Ex. =10 apples Example of a Circle Graph or Pie Chart Example of Double Bar Graph Example of Pictograph Line Plot Short hand = hour hand 60 seconds = 1 minute Long hand = minute hand 60 Minutes = 1 hour What is half? What is more than half? Which fraction is larger? 1/4 or 4/6? Equivalent fractions We will be learning about equivalent fractions 1 whole 1/ 1/ 1/ 8 1/ 2 1/ 4 1/ 8 1/ 8 1/ 4 1/ 8 1/ 8 2 1/ 4 1/ 8 1/ 8 4 1/ 8 1 whole 1/ 1/ 1/ 8 1/ 2 1/ 4 1/ 8 1/ 8 1/ 4 1/ 8 1/ 2 1/ 4 8 1/ 8 1/ 8 4 1/ 8 We can see that 2/8 is the same length as 1/4 So 2/8 = 1/4 They are equivalent fractions Geometry Solid Geometry is the geometry of threedimensional space, the kind of space we live in ...Three Dimensions. It is called three-dimensional, or 3D because there are three dimensions: width, depth and height. Geometry A sphere is a figure with all points the same distance from the center. A cube is a three-dimensional shape with six square or rectangular sides. A cylinder has two parallel faces that are circles. The circles are called bases. The distance from the center of the circle to a point on the circle is called the radius. A rectangular prism is a solid figure where all sides are rectangles and all sides meet perpendicular. A cone is a figure created by connecting every point of a circle to a point not in the plane of the circle. The point is called the vertex and the circle is called the base. A pyramid is a figure created by connecting every point of a polygon to a point not in the plane of the polygon. A vertex is the point where two sides of a polygon meet. Cube 6 Faces 8 Vertices 12 Edges Polygons are closed, flat 2-dimensional figures. Polygons are many sided figures that are line segments. A regular polygon is one that has EQUAL SIDES. Polygons also have diagonals. Polygons: Number Number Number of of of Sides Angles Diagonals Triangle 3 3 0 Quadrilateral 4 4 2 Pentagon 5 5 5 Hexagon 6 6 9 Heptagon 7 7 14 Octagon 8 8 20 Nonagon 9 9 27 Decagon 10 10 35 Congruent~ Same Size, Same Shape Similar~ Same Shape, Different Size Symmetric Figure~ A figure that can be folded flat along a line so that the two halves match perfectly is a symmetric figure; such a line is called a line of symmetry. Examples: The triangle below is a symmetric figure. The dotted line is the line of symmetry. The square below is a symmetric figure. It has four different lines of symmetry shown below. The rectangle below is a symmetric figure. It has two different lines of symmetry shown below Area = L x W Area = inside of a figure X 5 6 Mrs. Reed wants to purchase new carpeting for the her living room. What is the area of her room? 5 x 6 = 30 A. 30 square yards B. 22 yards C. 2 feet D. 25 square yards 5 cm Perimeter = Distance around the outside of a figure. + 7 cm 3 cm 6 cm 5 + 7 + 6 + 3 = _____ cm. What is the perimeter of this shape? A. 18 centimeters B. 20 centimeters C. 21 centimeters D. 21 square cm Number Patterns… 8, 10, 12, 14, __ What is the rule? Number ... 16 is next!!! 8, 10, 12, 14, 16 +2 +2 +2 Rule is +2 each time *This is a repeating pattern. +2 5 X 2 =10 Kids need to understand “groups of”… They also need to see how multiplication is related to division. Example: 6 X ____ =24 2 trees X 4 = apples 8 apples in all 5 X 2 = 10 2+2+2+2+2=10 3 4 3 x 4 = 12 8 x 5 = __ 8, 16, 24, 32, 40 6 + 6 = 12, so 2 X 6 = 12. 9 + 9 = 18, so 2 X 9 = 18. 0 X 1 =0 factor factor product 1 X 5 =5 factor factor product Multiplication Songs~ *Keep in Resources section of notebook 2’s (as a cheer) 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, that’s the way that we begin. 12, and 14, 16 too, that’s the way we count by two’s 18, 20, these are just a few of plenty! 3’s (to the tune of “Jingle Bells”) 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 24, 27, 30 we are done, hey! 4’s (to the tune of “Row, Row, Row Your Boat”) 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24. . . 28 and 32, 36 and 40. 5’s (to the tune of “Old McDonald”) 5 and 10 and 15, 20 e i e i o 25, 30, 35, 40, that’s the way it goes. With a 45 here and a 50 there, e i e i o. *12’s (to the tune of the Macarena) 12, 24, 36, 48 Hey Macarena! 60. 72. 84. 96 Do the Macarena! 108 and 120, Sing the Macaren (one hundred eight and one twenty) 132, 144 Shake the Macarena! (one thirty two and one forty four) 6’s (to the tune “Found A Peanut) 6, 12, 18, 24, 30 next comes 36 42 and 48 and six more makes 54. Last is 60 but don’t worry, it’s been fun, oh yes it has. But, please remember all your six’s or Mrs. Rogers will have a cow. 7’s (to the tune of “She’ll Be Comin’ Round The Mountain”) 7 and 14, 21 Hee Haw, Hee Haw 28 and 35 we’re halfway done Hee Haw 42 and 49, 56 and 63, and lastly we have 70 Hee Haw, Hee Haw! 8’s (to the tune of “BINGO”) 8, 16, 24, 32, and 40 48 and 56, 64 and 72 80 and 88 and now we are through. 9’s (to the tune of “Camptown Races”) 9, 18, 27, thirty-six 45 and 54, next is 63. Next is 72, then is 81, last is 90. . . now guess what? Now I know my 9’s, whoo-hoo! Example of an algebra equation using multiplication and division: What number is the solution to the equation below? 3=△÷9 (Algebra equation) * Show your work: 3 x 9 = _______, so 3 = _____ ÷ 9 A 3 B 12 You can use repeated addition to solve: 3 + 3 + 3 + 3 + 3 + 3 + 3 + 3 + 3 = ______ C 18 D 27 Math Websites: www.ixl.com Softschools.com Choose ___ grade math games Internet4classrooms ___ grade >Math Activities multiplication.com gameaquarium.com/math funbrain.com Jefferson County Schools Math power point presentations NCDPI Website~ has EOG math problems and testing information http://www.commoncoresheets.com/ Play Math Games at home~ Monopoly help kids count money. Roll dice and add 1 digit numbers for fluency. Then, try adding 2 digit numbers and 3 digit numbers. Try using this for subtraction as well. Bump It- multiplication game.