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MathNook Math Games

MathNook Math Games

Go Maths Problem Pictures Classroom Behavior Discipline Ideas We asked teachers to describe the behavior plans they use in their classrooms.Check out the fantastic responses below... Encouraging Frog-tastic BehaviorSubmitted by Cathy from North Carolina Expectations and Consequences I do a lot of different things in my classroom. Hopping People I use people cut outs with magnets on the back and each student has a person with their name on it. Captains and Co-Captains I focus more on positives in my classroom. Chance Tickets for Good Behavior As individuals, the students are able to earn "chance" tickets. As a class they also earn whole-class rewards by having excellent behavior. We also have "Frog-Tastic Friday." Warm Fuzzies Lastly, my students can give each other "Warm Fuzzies." Monthly Behavior ThemesSubmitted by Deana from Maryland Each month I choose a theme. For example, this month, April, I have an umbrella hanging above each group of 4 (can be altered to match your seating arrangements). Here are monthly ideas Hope you like these ideas!

Murderous Maths: Tricks and Games! Do you want to be a mind reader? 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?

KS2 Numeracy We have split the resources in to 7 groups as the page was very long and slow to load.Use the sub menu above to navigate within the KS2 Numeracy resources. Here are a few of the latest Key Stage 2 Maths resources. © v2vtraining.co.uk A versatile 12x12 square with three highlight colours, hide or reveal, variable start number and a variable step feature. Can you work out what the machine is doing to each number you put in? Read Sam's note and buy exactly what she asks for. Click on each child to find out their favourite hobby. Pass your driving test! Make a number between 425 and 450 by dragging the digits into the right places in the number machine. © 3913.co.uk Can you meet the 8 division challenge? Can you solve the problems using your division skills? Select two of the number tiles so that when they are multiplied together they equal the target value shown under the word "Number".

Free Math Games, Free Online Math Games, Maths Games, Math Games for Free, Printable Math Games, Free Kids Math Games Do2Learn: Educational Resources for Special Needs Multiples and Factors In this activity, students identify multiples and factors and solve problems that involve finding highest common factors and lowest common multiples. Students will need a good recall of multiplication basic facts in order to be able to do these activities. Activity One and Game Discuss the definitions of multiples and factors (on the student book page) before your students begin this activity. Make sure that they understand that every number is a factor of itself, because if they divide a number by itself, there is no remainder. This game could be extended by asking: • What are all the different products you could throw with the two game dice, one labelled 1–6 and the other 4–9? • There are two different ways of getting a product of 12: throwing a 3 and a 4 or a 2 and a 6. • What’s the probability of throwing a double? • Which squares in the game are easier/harder to cover? Harder to cover: a prime number [only 2 out of 36 combinations] and a multiple of 7 [only 6 chances out of 36].)

Median, Mean, & Mode Topic: Math ClassBrain Visitor: For each data set, find the mean, the median, and the mode. Tell which measure you find most useful for decribing the data. Explain why. 1. 2. 3. 4. ClassBrain Response: I will work through the first problem to show you how it’s done, but after that you must use the same rules and apply them to the other three problems. Since you are trying to find the mean, median, and mode, I’ll explain what those three things are. Mean - This is the average value of a set of numbers. In the case of problem #1, your numbers are 7, 9, 5, 3, 15, 15. To find the mean you must add all of the numbers together, and divide by how many there. The mean is 9. Median - This is the number that is in the middle of your set. So, look at problem #1 and put your numbers in order from lowest to highest. That would be: 3, 5, 7, 9, 15, 15 There is an even number of numbers (6 total). The median is 8. Mode - This is the number that occurs most frequently in your set. ClassBrain, Inc.

Number Notation Names | SI (Metric) Prefixes | Roman Numerals | Bases Hierarchy of Decimal Numbers Some people use a comma to mark every 3 digits. It just keeps track of the digits and makes the numbers easier to read. Beyond a million, the names of the numbers differ depending where you live. Fractions Digits to the right of the decimal point represent the fractional part of the decimal number. Examples: 0.234 = 234/1000 (said - point 2 3 4, or 234 thousandths, or two hundred thirty four thousandths) 4.83 = 4 83/100 (said - 4 point 8 3, or 4 and 83 hundredths) SI Prefixes Roman Numerals Roman Numeral Calculator There is no zero in the roman numeral system. The numbers are built starting from the largest number on the left, and adding smaller numbers to the right. The exception is the subtracted numerals, if a numeral is before a larger numeral, you subtract the first numeral from the second. There is no place value in this system - the number III is 3, not 111. Number Base Systems Java Base Conversion Calculator

Paper Models of Polyhedra Percents and Decimals Worksheets Thanks for visiting the U.S. number format version of the decimals and percents worksheets page at Math-Drills.Com where we make a POINT of helping students learn. On this page, you will find Decimals worksheets on a variety topics including comparing and sorting decimals, adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing decimals, and converting decimals to other number formats. To start, you will find the general use printables to be helpful in teaching the concepts of decimals and place value. Further down the page, rounding, comparing and ordering decimals worksheets allow students to gain more comfort with decimals before they move on to performing operations with decimals. General Use Printables The thousandths grid is a useful tool in representing operations with decimals. Thousandths GridHundredths GridsDecimal Place Value Chart Expanded Form with Decimals Rounding Decimals Worksheets The convention on the decimals worksheets below is to round up on a five. Percents Worksheets

Sacred Geometry - Polyhedra Tables of Platonic And Archimedean Solids <A HREF=" Widgets</A> Amazon.com - an ever-growing list of books, videos, tools, software, art and other items, or just select from the entire Amazon site Astro-logix - a unique system of glow-in-the-dark hubs and day-glow cylinders to make a phenomenal variety of 2D and 3D geometric models Bluehost - our GeometryCode.com webhost and domain registrar offers superb customer service, technical expertise and value; tops in every respect! Crop Circle Oracle Cards - A deck of 80 splendid geometric patterns made with cereal grains, photographed by leading researchers, Kabbalistic interpretations by Joseph-Mark Cohen Flying Cat Travel - Visiting the Great Pyramid, the Parthenon or some other geometrically interesting place? Fractiles - Versatile geometric toys made of magnetic diamond shaped tiles Gaiam

The Thirty Greatest Mathematicians Click for a discussion of certain omissions. 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. 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 Thales was the Chief of the "Seven Sages" of ancient Greece, and has been called the "Father of Science," the "Founder of Abstract Geometry," and the "First Philosopher." Tiberius(?)

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