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Cool Game Sites for Money, Fractions and Measurement

Monday's book post had lots of books about money, fractions and measurement.

 

Money Games from Kids Math Games 

 

Money Games from Practical Money Skills

 

Money Games from Kids.gov

Love “Design Your Own Bill”!

 

Fraction Games from Math Nook

 

Fraction Game for Kids from Science Kids

 

Pizza Party (fractions) from Primary Games

 

Fraction Games from Maths Games

 

Measurement Games from PBS Kids

 

Second Grade Measurements from Learning Games for Kids (other grades also available)

 

Measurement Games from GoGo Math Games


Looking for more math game sites? Click here for last week's links.

Gail


 

Improving Reading Fluency Part 2


Last Wednesday’s Parent Post, Improving Reading Fluency, Part 1, began our investigation of reading fluency. This week’s post continues this topic, with a heavier tech slant. 

The important thing to remember is whatever you choose to try, keep it light. I’d hate to think that anything I suggested detracts from your family fun!

 

Audio Books

As I’ve said before, I’m a big fan of audio books. They’re good for vocabulary development and increasing enjoyment of books. They’re also great for developing fluency. Some reasons and ways to use audio books:

  • Many librarians and teachers are women. Audio books allow boys to hear male narrators as role models.
  • Audio books provide models of good reading, pacing and expression.
  • Have your child listen to an audio book first and then have him read the text on his own, either to himself or aloud.
  • Audio book readers are usually trained actors. Model trying to read aloud like the audio book reader. Encourage your child to do the same. Keep it fun!
  • Have your child listen to the audio book while he or she follows along with an unabridged (important!) copy of the book.
  • Consider making your own audio books of favorite stories. Family members can read different parts. Ham it up!
  • If your child has been identified as having a learning disability or dyslexia, taped books are available from Recordings for the Blind & Dyslexic (RFB&D).

.

People Reading Activity

Print the People Reading cards.

Click on the following links to print off these short phrases:

Short Fluency Phrases (First 100 Words)

Short Fluency Phrases (Second 100 Words)

Short Fluency Phrases (Third 100 Words)

Reader 1 chooses a People card and a short fluency phrase card. She must read the short phrase to represent the person that was drawn. Take turns. Variation: players try to guess what People card the reader chose.

I love this idea! Check out Reading Resource for other ideas.

 

Robot Reader

This site is not free, but is one I would have been interested in as a teacher and probably as a parent. I like games that help you practice skills and the sheer volume of games offered here appeals to me. I’d love to hear your take on this program if you try it out.

 

Resources used for this post:

LD Online

ReadingResource.net

Recordings for the Blind & Dyslexic (RFB&D)

Robot Reader

 

Please share any fluency ideas you've tried!

Gail


Math Books for Fun: Money, Fractions, and Measuring

Last Week's post, Go Figure! Math Books for Fun, had lots of books that showed the fun side of adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing. Today's post is all about money, fractions, and measuring. 

 

 Follow the Money! by Loreen Leedy

A quarter starts out at the U.S. mint, where it was made. It ends up at a bank, where it was kept in a roll of quarters. A man buys the roll and uses it to buy groceries. From there, the quarter goes on many new adventures. This is a terrific look at a day in the life of a quarter.


Money Matters by Sean Callery (sorry, no link)

This book has all sorts of interesting information about money – its history, how it’s changed, ways to use it and other things. It’s broken into short chapters and has lots of pictures.


 The Lion’s Share: A Tale of Halving Cake and Eating It, Too by Matthew McElligott

A lion invites his friends for a special spring dinner. When it’s time for cake, the elephant takes half of it. Then the rhino takes half of that (1/4), and the gorilla takes half of that (1/8)… and so on. The ant is left with just crumbs, and nothing to share with the lion. She has a solution, but then the other animals add theirs. The illustrations of the rude animals are great.

 

 Full House: An Invitation to Fractions by Dayle Ann Dodds, illustrated by Abby Carter

Miss Bloom runs the Strawberry Inn. She has 5 guest rooms, plus one for herself. As each guest comes in, there is a new fraction: first guest = 1/6, second guest = 2/6 and so on. The guests are interesting and there’s a strawberry cake to cut into fractions.

 

 Whole-y Cow! Fractions are Fun by Taryn Souders, illustrated by Tatjana Mai-Wyss

I am a little amazed by this book. It shows fractions and the whole is a perfectly clear and fun way. A cow is painted half blue, wears a red, white and blue swimsuit, eats ice cream, catches butterflies, and more. This is a beautifully written and illustrated book.

 

 How Big is a Foot? by Rolf Myller

The king wants to give the queen a bed for her birthday. But how big should it be? The clever king figured out a way to measure that might have worked, but didn’t. How will the bed maker figure out how to solve the problem. This is an early reader book.

 

 Super Sand Castle Saturday by Stuart J. Murphy, illustrated by Julia Gorton

Three kids engage in a sand castle contest for the tallest tower, the deepest moat, and the longest wall. They figure out the winners but then discover they’d been measuring all wrong. This is a simple and summery introduction to standard measurement.

 

 Mighty Maddie by Stuart J. Murphy

Maddie has to clean up her toys before her friends come to celebrate her birthday. She calls on her “Super Maddie” alter ego to get the job done. This is a basic story about weight – heavy, light, heavier, and lighter.

 

 Counting on Frank by Rod Clement

Frank has a math mind and it’s going all the time. He doesn’t just think up math questions, he answers them. Like, How many Franks (his dog) would fit in his room? or How long would it take to fill the entire bathroom with water? (Don’t try this at home!) In the end there are math questions to consider yourself.

 

 The Penny Pot by Stuart J. Murphy, illustrated by Lynne Cravath

Jessie is at the school fair and really wants to get her face painted. But instead of the 50 cents she needs, she has only 39 cents. No problem, the face painted asks anyone to add their extra pennies to the penny pot. This is a good story about counting money and being generous with your money.


This last book is not about money, fractions, or measuring but it’s quite clever and (warning) tricky!

 Edgar Allan Poe’s Pie: Math Puzzlers in Classic Poems  by J. Patrick Lewis, illustrated by Michael Slack

A perfect book for poetry and math lovers! The author took famous poems (The Raven by Poe, Boa Constrictor by Silverstein, and 12 others) and switched them up into math riddles. Hard! Fun!

 

 I'm sure to have left out one of your favorite books on money, gractions, and measuring. Please add it to the Comments Box!

Gail


Cool Game Sites for Math

This week’s math sites are for all kinds of math. Each site has a huge variety. Check them out!


Math Games from Kid Sites

 

Cool Math Games from Cool Math

 

Math Arcade from Fun Brain

 

Math Games from Math Playground

 

Math Games from PBS Kids


Looking for more math games? Check back next Friday for money, fractions and measurement games.

Gail


Improving Reading Fluency Part 1

This week and next, I’m re-posting my 2 posts on reading fluency, with a few modifications. Fluency is an important topic and I think it’s worth visiting again.


What is Reading Fluency?

Fluency is the ability to read text accurately, quickly and with confidence. It’s the ability to read phrases and sentences smoothly and quickly, and most importantly, with comprehension.

 

Why is Reading Fluency important?

As children become fluent readers, they begin to think less about the words and more about the meaning of the sentences they're reading. Fluent readers can respond to the material with emotion and thought. Without fluency, reading is a chore because so much effort goes into decoding (sounding out) each word. With that much effort, there’s little energy left for making meaning.

Fortunately, there are ways to improve fluency. Here are some suggestions. The important thing is to choose activities that your child wants to do or at least doesn’t mind (or fight) doing.

 

Model Fluent Reading

When you read aloud, read with as much expression as the story permits. No need to be over the top – unless that’s fun for you and your child. In my mind, goofy is good!

 

Repeated Readings

Many children enjoy reading, and hearing, the same story/book/poem over and over. This is a good thing – repeated readings and hearings builds in comfort and familiarity. Such familiarity reduces the need for decoding and allows better flow, and therefore, confidence.

 

Echo Reading

Echo reading is when one reader reads a piece of text and a second reader echoes that same piece. This works really well with poems but other text can be used as well. I suggest you switch roles frequently so your child gets to be the first reader and you are the echoer.

 

Choral Reading

Try reading together! Choose a piece of text and read it simultaneously together. Maybe even read it together for someone else.

 

Drama

See the post 9 Books for Summer Drama Fun for resources.

Suggestions:

  • everyone has a copy of the complete script
  • highlight each player’s part (yellow highlighting is best because the other colors tend to obscure the text)
  • read the script aloud before choosing parts
  • ham it up!


Coming up next Wednesday: Improving Reading Fluency Part 2

Gail


Go Figure! Math Books for Fun

I enjoy math. There are lots of books that teach you how to get better at math. But those aren't the books I've included here. Today's books are more about seeing math as fun and interesting. You might learn something new with these books, but that’s just an added benefit.


 Minnie’s Diner: A Multiplying Menu by Dayle Ann Dodds, illustrated by John Manders

The McFay family goes to the barn to do their chores. But one by one, they head to Minnie’s Diner for something to eat. The youngest orders the special, which is a fair amount of food. But when each of his brothers orders, he orders double of the brother before. Great fun!

 

Ten Times Better by Richard Michelson, illustrated by Leonard Baskin (sorry, no link)

An elephant starts by boasting about its one trunk. A squid is not impressed: it has 10 tentacles – much better! All sorts of animals continue to boast about their best features: 6 legs (ant) vs. 60 teeth (crocodile), 8 eyes (tarantula) vs. 80 eyes (on its peacock feathers).

 

 How Many Jelly Beans? by Andrea Menotti, illustrated by Yancey Labat

This book is really big! Its cover is big and some of its pages are huge. Makes sense, since one of the pages has 1,000,000 jelly beans. Care to count them?

 

 Frankie Pickle and the Mathematical Menace  by Eric Wright

Poor Frankie – he has to study for a math test over the weekend. But then fun things keep happening to keep him from studying. But were they just for fun? If you’d rather have math in games and real-life activities, you’ll like this graphic novel.

 

 Breakfast at Danny’s Diner: A Book about Multiplication  by Judith Bauer Stamper, illustrated by Chris Demarest

Twins Tina and Tony help out at their uncle's diner. They need to multiply to figure things out: setting tables, preparing orders, and doubling the ingredients for a pancake recipe. This book is part of the All Aboard Math Reader series (level 3). The pictures help make the problems even clearer. This is a good math-in-real-life book.

 

 The Chicken Problem by Jennifer Oxley and Billy Aronson

Peg and Cat love pie and solving problems. They go to a farm to have a perfect pie picnic with Pig. But what about the 100 chicks that just got loose from their coop? This is only sort of a math book but it is so fun, I had to include it!

 

 How Much is a Million?  by David M. Schwartz, illustrated by Steven Kellogg

Have you ever wondered how long it would take to count to one million? How about how big of a goldfish bowl you’d need for one billion goldfish? Well, this book answers those questions and many more. You never know when you might need to know this stuff!

 

 2 X 2 = Boo! A Set of Spooky Multiplication Stories  by Loreen Leedy

I know this is a Halloween book but it’s a really good multiplication book so I included it. Witches, cats, skeletons and bats figure out problems with multiplication. This comic-style book is fun and shows multiplication really well.

 

 The Great Divide  by Dayle Ann Dodds, illustrated by Tracy Mitchell

The race starts with 80 racers. The path splits and half fail to go on. But 40 do make it and go on until they have to divide and only 20 continue. The race proceeds with the racers dividing and dividing until the very end. If you are like me, you’ll have to go back to check who the winner was.

 

 One Hundred Hungry Ants by Elinor J. Pinczes, illustrated by Bonnie Mackain

One hundred hungry ants set off to raid a picnic, walking ant-style in a single line. The littlest ant complains they are too slow and tells them to form 2 lines of 50. The ants scramble to create the 2 lines and they march on. Until the littlest ant has another idea… And another…They finally get there but will there be anything to eat?

 

 Missing Math by Loreen Leedy

All the numbers in town suddenly disappear and everyone discovers how much they depend on them. A detective investigates the mystery, hoping to restore numbers to their proper places on chalkboards, rulers, TV remotes, speed-limit signs, clocks, calendars, cookbooks, calculators, and computers… the list goes on. The number thief is found but why all the number-stealing?


Looking for math books about money? Fractions? Measurement? Then next Monday's post is for you!

Gail

 

Online Games for Mother's Day Fun

Mother’s Day is in 9 days. Here are some games to play with your mom!


Mother's Day Games and Puzzles from DLTK

games puzzles, printables

 

Mother’s Day from Hello Kids

puzzles, games, links…

 

Mother’s Day from Squiggly’s Playhouse

coloring, games, quizzes

 

Mother’s Day Games from Primary Games

puzzles, word searches, matching

 

Games and Activities for Mother’s Day from A Kid’s Heart

games, puzzles, word search…

 


Hope you have fun!

Gail

Happy Mother's Day Crafts

Mother’s Day is in 11 days. This gives us just enough time to follow directions and create something fun. I found lots of sites with bunches of ideas.

 

Mother's Day Crafts, Cards, Activities, and Worksheets from Enchanted Learning

flowers, picture frames, cards and printables

 

Mother's Day Crafts for Kids from Martha Stewart

cards, tote bag, check book cover…

 

151 Great Mother's Day Craft Ideas from Mother’s Day Central

LOTS of ideas!

 

Mother's Day Crafts Kids Can Make from Better Homes and Gardens

gift jar (love this!), time capsule, flowers…

 

Mother's Day Activities from DLTK

cards, games, crafts…

 

Mother's Day from Spoonful

gifts, cards, recipes, quotes…

 

Happy Mother’s Day!

Gail


Books for a Happy Mother’s Day

Mother’s Day is May 12 so here are some books to help us get in the spirit.

 

 The Runaway Bunny  by Margaret Wise Brown

Once there was a bunny who wanted to run away. He tried many times, but no matter where he went, his mother was always there. For many reasons, this is one of my all-time favorite books. It works as a simple, and lovely, picture book. It also works as a lovely picture of a good and safe world.

 

 M.O.M. (Mom Operating Manual) by Doreen Cronin and Laura Cornell

Everyone who has a mom needs an owner’s manual, right? This book attempts to explain moms and offers helpful hints for their care and feeding. It’s not a serious owner’s manual, of course, but there are sparks of wisdom throughout. Moms will love the humor.

 

 Mars Needs Moms! by Berkeley Breathed

After she sends him to his room, Milo is not too happy with his mom. Then Martian raiders arrive and kidnap all the mothers, including his own. Milo sneaks on board their spaceship and discovers why the moms have been kidnapped. They are needed to drive the Martians to soccer games, pack lunches, and put Band-Aids on cuts. Now what?

 

 Love to Mamá A Tribute to Mothers edited by Pat Mora, illustrated by Paula S. Barragán M.

This collection has 13 poems that celebrate Latina mothers and grandmothers. The poets write about Puerto Rico, Cuba, Mexico, and Venezuela and about their families in the U.S.

 

 My Mom has X-Ray Vision by Angela McAllister, illustrated by Alex T. Smith

Matthew is pretty sure his mom has X-ray vision. She knows just what he’s doing even when she’s not in the same room with him. Then he tests her to see if this is really true. His experiment proves…

 

 The Day My Mom Came to Kindergarten by Maureen Fergus and Mike Lowery

A girl in Kindergarten invites her mom to classroom one day. But she soon regrets it when it is clear her mom knows nothing about how to behave in Kindergarten. This is great fun and sure to please kindergartners and first graders.

 

 Mommy is That You? by Atsuko Morozumi

A nest of duck eggs is blown away by a big wind and lands on a turtle. “Mommy is that you?” they ask the turtle. “Certainly not.” They ask many others, with the same negative answer. Until they come to a white, fluff back. This is a sweet story.

 

 Motherlove by Virginia Kroll

This book tells how several different animal mothers care for their young. The illustrations are lovely and the text also gives interesting facts about each animal .

 

 M is for Mom: A Child’s Alphabet by Mary Ann McCabe Riehle, illustrated by Chris Ellison

Writing this book was probably pretty fun. The author had to come up with an alphabet’s worth of things all about mothers: A is for Arms, E is for Excitement, L is for Lessons, Q is for Questions…


What are your favorite Mother’s Day books? Write them in the Comment’s Box!

Gail


MORE Poetry Websites for Kids

As I promised in last week's Fun Friday Post, here are more poetry sites.

 

Poetry Interactives Just for Kids

Poems to read, listen to and write

 

Poetry and Songs for Children from DLTK

Organized by themes, types and poets

 

Poetry Writing by Jack Prelutsky from Scholastic

Read and write poems

 

Writing I Spy Riddle Rhymes with Jean Marzollo from Scholastic

Poet Jean Marzollo helps you write I Spy riddle rhymes

 

Poetry Games from 4You4Free

 

A week of math posts coming up next week!

Gail

Monthly Archives

Recent Posts

  1. Cool Game Sites for Money, Fractions and Measurement
    Friday, May 17, 2013
  2. Improving Reading Fluency Part 2
    Wednesday, May 15, 2013
  3. Math Books for Fun: Money, Fractions, and Measuring
    Monday, May 13, 2013
  4. Cool Game Sites for Math
    Friday, May 10, 2013
  5. Improving Reading Fluency Part 1
    Wednesday, May 08, 2013
  6. Go Figure! Math Books for Fun
    Monday, May 06, 2013
  7. Online Games for Mother's Day Fun
    Friday, May 03, 2013
  8. Happy Mother's Day Crafts
    Wednesday, May 01, 2013
  9. Books for a Happy Mother’s Day
    Monday, April 29, 2013
  10. MORE Poetry Websites for Kids
    Friday, April 26, 2013

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