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I'm in my last term of student teaching first-level (Interactive Mathematics Program I and II, plus a 'Math Recovery' project class) and looking for games or activities for my students that are FUN!

Many don't enjoy Math Bingo or the 24 card game, I'm afraid, and a lot of them really despise Sudoku puzzles, so I'm hoping to find some alternatives. Any suggestions are welcome!

I've got a mix of several different ethnicities (Hispanic, White, Old-Russian, Asian) and am weighted more towards a lower SES strata with a number of kids of migrant farm workers, so trying to find drills and activities that match my skill and interest levels is always tough.

Thanks in advance for the advice, suggestions and the like!

Orion

2007-02-10 05:12:36 · 4 answers · asked by Orion 5 in Education & Reference Teaching

4 answers

Well there are Kakuro puzzles but if they don't like sudoku...
I am not sure if the site contains programs for 9t hand 10th graders, but check out MISTM Math Portal--it's pretty cool. I am a student just finishing Junior high that is usually bored in math class, and even I think MISTM is fun!

2007-02-10 12:54:38 · answer #1 · answered by Monkey Girl 2 · 1 0

10th Grade Math Games

2016-11-04 03:26:22 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

it is not that they don't have undemanding math skills--they have _selective_ math skills. as an occasion, they evaluate entire wins in NASCAR sanctioned events, and proclaim that throughout accordance with that, KyBusch is 2nd in basic terms to Richard Petty (and of their minds, will surpass him in a pair of years time). yet once you truly need to count huge form wins in NASCAR sanctioned events, the chief is Richie Evans, who has (i think of) 475. So he's the two 350 or so in the back of Evans (in case you count huge form all NASCAR wins) or he's 170ish in the back of Petty in case you in basic terms count huge form Cup wins. yet they prefer to count huge form all wins for Busch, and alter up 0.5 way with the aid of to evaluate it to Cup in basic terms wins. it is not intellectually easy. Lindsay, you may desire to no longer prefer to bag on somebody's math skills once you incorrectly calculated (two times) their triumphing possibilities. the suited formula for % is (wins/starts)*one hundred. once you do the mathematics wisely, JJ's triumphing share is 15.a million%. KyBusch is at 8.6%

2016-09-28 22:20:32 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Want to prove 3=2?

Look here.
http://cutemaths.blogspot.com

2007-02-15 15:33:57 · answer #4 · answered by vinxxib 1 · 0 0

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