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Parent Tips to Improve Math Skills
Home is Where the Math Is
- Explore math in everyday life - counting
out forks to set the table, pouring from a gallon of milk, telling
the time when his favorite TV program begins. When kids realize
that math is all around them, they begin to relax and see its
meaning in their lives.
- Show how math is more than learning
addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. Math also
teaches us to analyze, reason, and plan. These are useful skills
that transfer over to reading and writing as well.
- Model analytical and mathematical
thinking. Be a problem solver, pose questions, and find solutions.
Talk about likenesses and differences, and explain your
reasoning.
- Encourage your child to explain his
problem-solving process so you can understand their
reasoning.
- When driving to school or the store, talk
about how numbers help us determine how fast we drive, the distance
traveled, the mileage the car gets per gallon of gas, and how long
it will take to get home.
- Expose your child to money in her early
school years. Have them collect coins in a piggy bank and count
them out regularly. If they receives an allowance, have her keep
track of the amount or start a bank account.
- Have your child use an analog and a
digital watch to learn both methods of telling time.
- Incorporate games involving numbers and
math into playtime - from flash cards for learning basic math facts
to board games involving money, time, and logic.
- Post a chart of math facts in your child's
room. Some activities and games can help kids memorize math
concepts.
- Educational video games and learning
software can also reinforce math skills, from arithmetic to
algebra. Older students may want to use calendars and spreadsheets
to plan out their daily or weekly schedules.
- When helping your child, ask questions to
guide him through the process, such as "Where do you begin?" "What
do you need to find out?" "Can you show me in a drawing how you got
the answer?"
- It's OK to say that you don't understand a
problem. It gives you an opportunity to review the lesson together
to see if you've missed an important piece of
information.
- Establish a clear understanding with your
child's teacher about the frequency and amount of homework they
will receive. Modification of homework may increase their
motivation and productivity. With their teacher, decide if your
child needs to do fewer problems, or if they can say the answers
out loud and you can write them for her, or if she can check her
work with a calculator.
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