Nearly all students from low鈥慽ncome households
Data about students' economic need comes from the National Center for Education Statistics, via our partners at MDR Education.
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This project is for my students to build their math skills, number sense, and relationships through games with their families. All parents want their child to succeed and to spend quality time with their children, why not help them combine these desires... and learn to love mathematics along the way?
According to Mathnasium,
鈥 Playing games encourages strategic mathematical thinking as students find different strategies for solving problems and deepen their understanding of numbers.
鈥 When played repeatedly, games support students鈥 development of computational fluency.
鈥 Games present opportunities for practice, often without the need for teachers to provide the problems.
鈥 Games have the potential to allow students to develop familiarity with the number system and with 鈥渂enchmark numbers鈥 (such as 10s, 100s, and 1000s) and engage in computation practice, building a deeper understanding of operations.
鈥 Games support a school-to-home connection. Parents can learn about their children鈥檚 mathematical thinking by playing games with them at home and helps to relieve math anxiety or the hate of mathematics.
In addition, playing games helps children develop their social-emotional health by fostering turn-taking, being patient, and collaborative problem-solving.
Please consider helping my goal of getting math games into all my students' homes and developing their love of mathematics.
About my class
This project is for my students to build their math skills, number sense, and relationships through games with their families. All parents want their child to succeed and to spend quality time with their children, why not help them combine these desires... and learn to love mathematics along the way?
According to Mathnasium,
鈥 Playing games encourages strategic mathematical thinking as students find different strategies for solving problems and deepen their understanding of numbers.
鈥 When played repeatedly, games support students鈥 development of computational fluency.
鈥 Games present opportunities for practice, often without the need for teachers to provide the problems.
鈥 Games have the potential to allow students to develop familiarity with the number system and with 鈥渂enchmark numbers鈥 (such as 10s, 100s, and 1000s) and engage in computation practice, building a deeper understanding of operations.
鈥 Games support a school-to-home connection. Parents can learn about their children鈥檚 mathematical thinking by playing games with them at home and helps to relieve math anxiety or the hate of mathematics.
In addition, playing games helps children develop their social-emotional health by fostering turn-taking, being patient, and collaborative problem-solving.
Please consider helping my goal of getting math games into all my students' homes and developing their love of mathematics.