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of
Homeschooling for FREE! |
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A Word from Your Editor - Math, math, and more
math! Aren't you excited? Sudoku - the latest craze! Incorporate it into your
math studies! |
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Freebie Math Resources on the Internet - Cindy Downes gives
us gobs and gobs of resources to use in teaching math. I guarantee you'll be sufficiently
overwhelmed with Internet links. |
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Does It Count As School? - Veteran homeschooler Barb Frank
says anything can count as school. I agree! |
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FREE Math Game Download! |
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Another Contest?!? - CRAZY 4 MATH sponsors a contest for
kids. |

Math.
Sometimes just the sheer mention of it can send chills up the spine of children.
Why is this subject so frightening to some, yet so endearing to others? I know
kids who just LOVE math. Maybe you have one of those kids.
I've been doing more difficult math with my daughter this year, and I have
to say it's a lot harder than I remember. I'm re-learning stuff that I haven't
looked at in years. I never have understood area and perimeter and all that. And
honestly, I really haven't used it in my adult life. Do you ever get asked this
question: "Will I ever use this when I grow up?"
I know I'm going to need all the help I can get in the coming years. I've still
got high school math to go with my daughter and three boys right behind her. I
wish we could stick with just telling time and addition and subtraction - that
I can handle. But alas, there is more to be learned.
When I asked Cindy Downes if she could find some freebies on the Internet
to help with math, I had no idea there were so many! There is so much FREE
help out there! More than I ever imagined. Be encouraged as you browse through
these resources.
I've also got some great "words of wisdom" from veteran homeschooler
Barb Frank. She reminds us that most everything can be counted as school.
And lastly, have you caught the Sudoku craze yet? Where have you BEEN? I guarantee
you'll be hooked after one game. You don't have a clue what I'm talking about?
Visit here
for a short tutorial on this mathematical mind game. And then go here,
and then here, and then here
and then - well, by then you'll be hooked! Maybe your kids will be too! But shhhhh
- don't dare tell them they're practicing math.
Until next month, happy FREE mathing! Is that a word?!?
Julie Nott, Editor
www.HomeschoolBlogger.com/Julie
www.HomeschoolBlogger.com/FreeStuffForHomeschoolers
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"God does arithmetic."
"There are problems to whose solution I would
attach an infinitely greater importance than to those of mathematics, for example
touching ethics, or our relation to God, or concerning our destiny and our future;
but their solution lies wholly beyond us and completely outside the province of
science."
- Gauss, Karl Friedrich (1777-1855)
In J. R. Newman, Ed., The World of Mathematics, New York: Simon and Schuster,
1956. p. 314.
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By Cindy Downes
The Internet is a wonderful resource for freebie math
resources. You'll find lesson plans, interactive lessons,
flash cards, worksheets, math games, and much more.
Here are just a few:
Internet sites for teachers:
AAA Math (step-by-step lessons in math for K-8): www.aaamath.com/index.html
All Math (includes teacher resources, worksheets, games
and more:
www.allmath.com
Although not all the resources listed are free, there
is a lot of free
information that will help you teach
math: www.livingmath.net/Index.html
Art of Math (problems): www.artofmath.com
Ask Dr. Math (help with math problems): mathforum.org/dr.math
Forum (tips, tricks, problems and puzzles): mathforum.org/k12/mathtips/index.html
- calculate
Graphics for the Calculus Classroom: www.ima.umn.edu/%7Earnold/graphics.html
I Know That.com (lots of resources for teachers and
students): http://www.iknowthat.com/com/L3?Area=L2_Math
Living Math, dedicated to helping parents teach math
using literature.
Math Math.com Formulas & Tables: http://www.math.com/tables/tables.htm
Math Portal (lesson plans, activities, how to teach,
more): http://fcit.usf.edu/math/default.htm
MegaMath: http://www.c3.lanl.gov/mega-math/menu.html
Music Math lesson plan: http://www.lessonplanspage.com/MathMusicOrderOfOperationsNote
ValuesIdea46.htm
NCEE Lesson Plans for K-12 Economics: http://www.ncee.net/resources/
lessons.php
Skills in Arithmetic (a complete course in arithmetic): http://www.themathpage.com/ARITH/arithmetic.htm
Singapore Math (currently free) worksheets: http://www.singeducation.com/MathPortal.htm
Webmath (help in solving math problems): http://www.webmath.com
Internet sites for students - drill work, practice, activities:
Abacus (calculating with beads): http://www.ee.ryerson.ca/8080:~elf:abacus
About ThatQuiz (math tests): http://www.thatquiz.com/tq/docs/about.html
ACT/SAT Math Drills: http://www.saab.org/mathdrills
Algebra Help: http://www.algebrahelp.com
BasketMath Interactive: http://www.scienceacademy.com/BI/index.html
Batter's Up Baseball math game: http://www.prongo.com/math
Calculus Help: http://www.calculus-help.com
Cool Math for Kids: http://www.coolmath4kids.com
Count us In (games that teach number concepts): http://www.abc.net.au/
countusin
Counting Story (teach young children to count): http://www.magickeys.com/books/count/index.html
Curious Math (tricks and rules): http://www.curiousmath.com
Cut the Knot (Interactive Math Activities): http://www.cut-the-knot.org/Curriculum/index.shtml
Dave's Short Trig Course: http://aleph0.clarku.edu/%7Edjoyce/java/trig
Egyptian Math: http://www.eyelid.co.uk/numbers.htm
Euclid's Elements: http://haleph0.clarku.edu/%7Edjoyce/java/elements/
toc.html
Famous Problems in the HIstory of Mathematics: http://mathforum.org/isaac/mathhist.html
Fibonacci numbers: http://www.mcs.surrey.ac.uk/Personal/R.Knott/
Fibonacci/fib.html
Figure This! (Math challenges): http://www.figurethis.org
File Folder Game (Numbers in Bloom): www.preschoolprintables.com/filefolder/flower/filefolderflower.shtml
Flashcards 4 Kids: http://www.edu4kids.com/index.php?TB=2&page=12
Fraction Tutorial: http://www.kidsolr.com/math/fractions.html
Fresh Baked Fractions game: http://www.funbrain.com/fract/
Fun Brain Game Finder (math): http://www.funbrain.com/cgi-bin/
getskill.cgi?A4=1
Fun Math Games: http://math.rice.edu/~lanius/Lessons/
Google Math Games: http://www.googolpower.com/games.php
Google Power free math ebooks: http://googolpower.com/ebook.php
Graphing Vector Calculator: http://www.frontiernet.net/%7Eimaging/vector_calculator.html
Harcourt Math Glossary: http://www.hbschool.com/glossary/math2/indexk.html
Introduction to Trigonometry: http://www.ping.be/%7Eping1339/gonio.htm
Juice Bottle Jingles (number recognition game with music): http://www.lhs.berkeley.edu/shockwave/jar.html
MacTutor History of Mathematics: http://turnbull.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/
Math Cats (interactive math teaching games): http://www.mathcats.com
Math Dictionary for Kids: http://www.amathsdictionaryforkids.com
Math Facts Game: http://home.indy.rr.com/lrobinson/mathfacts/mathfacts.html
Math for Kids, Thinkquest Medieval Adventure in Problem Solving: http://library.thinkquest.org/4471/
Math Magician Games: http://www.oswego.org/ocsd-web/games/Mathmagician/cathymath.html
Math Quotations: math.furman.edu/%7Emwoodard/mquot.html
Math World (encyclopedia): http://mathworld.wolfram.com
Multiplication.com (lesson on multiplication): http://www.multiplication.com
/teach.htm
Multiplication Help: http://www.vtaide.com/png/twinfacts.htm
Online Trig flash cards: http://www.math.uakron.edu/~tprice/Trig/instruct.html
Plane Math Activities: http://www.planemath.com/activities/pmactivities4.html
Prime Pages (everything you ever wanted to know about prime numbers): http://primes.utm.edu
Probability Tutorials: http://www.probability.net
Purple Math (free algebra lessons): http://www.purplemath.com
Roman Numeral Converter: http://www.ivtech.com/roman/
Trigonometric Functions Illustrated:
http://www.ies.co.jp/math/products/trig/menu.html
Word Problems for kids: http://www.mcs.surrey.ac.uk/Personal/R.Knott/Fibonacci/fib.html
Visual Calculus: http://archives.math.utk.edu/visual.calculus/
Visual Fractions: http://www.visualfractions.com
Internet sites with Math Worksheets:
A+ Math, worksheets, flashcard creator, and more: http://www.aplusmath.com/
BBC Worksheets: http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/numbertime/print/index.shtml
Cybersleuth Math Worksheets: http://cybersleuth-kids.com/sleuth/Math/Math_Worksheets/
Kidszone Math (worksheets): http://www.kidzone.ws/math/
Math Fact Cafe: http://www.mathfactcafe.com
Math Goodies: http://www.mathgoodies.com
Math Worksheet Generator: http://themathworksheetsite.com
Math Worksheets from EdHelper: http://www.edhelper.com/math.htm
Superkids Math Worksheet Creator: http://www.superkids.com/aweb/tools/math/index.shtml
Internet sites for teaching money & finances:
50 State Quarters, Lesson Plans: http://www.usmint.gov/kids/index.cfm?fileContents=/kids/teachers/50SQ
LessonPlans.cfm
Common Cents: http://www.statefarm.com/kidstuf/commoncents/index.htm
Escape from Knab (finances game): http://www.escapefromknab.com
First Gov for Kids/Money: http://www.kids.gov/k_money.htm
Junior Achievement: http://www.ja.org
KidsBank: http://www.kidsbank.com
Money Worksheets: http://www.edhelper.com/money.htm
Oklahoma Stock Market Simulation Lesson Plan: http://www.oklahomasms.com/ok_lessons.shtml
Printable play checks: http://www.dltk-kids.com/crafts/miscellaneous/
mcheck.html
Stock Market Game: http://www.smg2000.org
Internet sites for teaching time:
Clock Faces (printable): http://www.bry-backmanor.org/actpag252.html
It’s About Time: http://www.units.muohio.edu/dragonfly/time/
Time Worksheets: http://www.edhelper.com/Time.htm
Internet sites for teaching graphing skills:
Create a Graph: http://nces.ed.gov/nceskids/graphing/index.asp
Internet sites for teaching statistics and
probability:
Can Teach: http://www.canteach.ca/elementary/statprob.html
Cindy Downes is the
author of The Checklist, the creator of the Oklahoma
Homeschool website, and a veteran homeschool mom
who began teaching her own children in 1981. She
homeschooled in Delaware, Virginia, Pennsylvania,
and Oklahoma; administrated three support groups;
and taught homeschool seminars at both the state
and local levels. She currently resides in Oklahoma
with her husband, Bill, and two cats. Now that her
children are grown, she enjoys being a grandmother,
cooking, reading, writing, bicycling, and helping
others to homeschool.
Websites: http://www.oklahomahomeschool.com and http://www.cindydownes.com
Email: mail@cindydownes.com |
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Wondering what
should your children watch? Choose from thousands of films and DVDs with
assurance. You can even purchase many videos from our webstore. The KIDS FIRST!
stamp of approval means no gratuitous violence, no inappropriate sexual behavior,
and no bias in terms of race, gender, culture or religion. KIDS FIRST! is an initiative
of the 15 year old non-profit Coalition for Quality Children's Media that evaluates,
rates, and endorses children's feature films, DVDs, videos, audio recordings and
television. The Coalition's goal is to empower children to make wise media choices
and to promote quality media products that enrich their lives. The KIDS FIRST!
stamp of approval means no gratuitous violence, no inappropriate sexual behavior,
and no bias in terms of race, gender, culture or religion. For more information,
please visit http://www.kidsfirst.org. |
By Barbara Frank
My son's morning routine is slowly (very slowly) getting faster. It
once took him an hour to go to the bathroom, wash his hands and face, brush his
teeth, and get dressed. Now, several years later, his current "best time"
is 15 minutes. That's how it is when you have a child with disabilities. Progress
can be very slow in some areas, but you have to keep at it because the child needs
to become as independent as he is capable of being.
I used to get frustrated by how much time his morning routine ate up, because
it cut into our academic time. But after a while I came to realize that dressing
himself is an important part of his education. After all, what is the purpose
of teaching your child? It's to prepare him for life, and part of life is getting
ready every morning for whatever your day will bring.
Like any other child, my son progresses faster in the areas he's interested
in. It's not that important to him to get dressed or to read, so his progress
in those areas is slow. But he's all about food, so he likes to cook with me.
(He would prefer to cook without me, but that's non-negotiable at this point!)
Just the other day we made macaroni and cheese for lunch and served it with a
fruit salad that he helped assemble. He is a very eager cook and is good at remembering
how to use utensils. When it comes to cooking, he's an "A" student.
But does cooking count as "school"? Sure it does. He is learning
a life skill. If he attended public school, he'd be working with therapists who
would teach him practical skills such as cooking (only they'd call it "food
preparation" or "culinary arts").
Some people would say that activities like self-care and cooking may count
as school for a child with developmental disabilities, but for most children,
school should be math, reading, history, science, and so on. I agree that a well-rounded
education includes those subjects (although I think which subjects to include
ultimately depends on the parents' personal preferences as well as each child's
aptitudes), and I required my other children to study all of them. But that doesn't
mean that anything outside of those basic subjects should not count as school.
My 14-year-old daughter and I often walk to the post office or the public library;
I count that as her P.E. Last summer she made a quilt and sent it with our church's
mission team to Mexico, where it was given to a poor family. I included that on
her record as Home Economics and volunteer work (which is now required of many
public high school students). Our homeschool group sponsors an annual card-making/scrapbooking
workshop at a local scrapbooking store; that's going down on the books as Art.
When my older children were teens, I included more on their transcripts than
just their grades in traditional subjects. I listed my daughter's experience running
merchandise tables at concerts to raise money for a pro-life organization, the
Christian coffeehouse she started and ran, and her part-time job caring for a
neighbor's newborn baby. My son's transcript included the website he designed
and ran that was written up in Baseball Weekly, the mission trips he
served on, and the non-credit online IT courses he took for fun.
I included these activities on their transcripts because they had learned at
least as much (and probably more) from these experiences than they had learned
studying traditional subjects. As we later discovered, it certainly didn't hurt
to put them on there: my son was accepted at all six of the universities to which
he applied. (My daughter chose not to attend college.)
Once you realize that all of your child's activities are learning experiences,
you can shed that formal education mentality you were raised with that says only
traditional subjects count as school. You realize that almost everything your
child learns to do counts as school: reading for pleasure, writing an email to
Grandma, making Dad's birthday cake. This continues on into the teenage years:
the teen who learns to change the oil in her car, do her own income tax, or design
and sew her bedroom curtains is doing school.
It doesn't end once the teen becomes an adult. Think of the expectant mother
educating herself about the changes in her body and her unborn child as her pregnancy
progresses, or the young couple learning all they can about mortgages as they
search for their first house. Even the elderly woman studying her options for
long-term care facilities is becoming educated in an important subject.
Let's face it: life is school. Everything we do counts as school.
Just because we learn something without a book or a teacher or a class does not
mean we aren't learning. I figured that out while homeschooling my older children,
but it really hit home for me once I understood that my youngest son's school
day begins at the bathroom sink. Yes, it counts as school.
Barbara Frank is the mother of four homeschooled-from-birth
children, ages 13-22, a freelance writer and editor, and the author of "Life
Prep for Homeschooled Teenagers." To visit her website, "The Imperfect
Homeschooler," go to www.cardamompublishers.com.
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"Mathematics
is a language."
- Josiah Willard Gibbs (1839-1903)
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Touted as "The Ultimate Multiplication Tables Tutor," Timez Attack is
an exciting and enjoyable math game with a FREE downloadable version. The full
version is also available for purchase.
My boys LOVE this game! Add fire-breathing, weird looking animals with strategies
and levels of accomplishment, and they're hooked! Little do they know it's educational!
http://www.bigbrainz.com/Download.html |
CRAZY 4 MATH is an online math contest for children to keep up math skills during
the summer. To enter, tell us how you use math in an activity you enjoy. Prizes
for everyone! Many learning ideas for families! Help create the largest FREE list
of "Crazy 4 Math" ideas created by kids, for kids. Entry deadline
is July 15, 2006. Winners announced in August. http://www.crazy4math.com
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"The solution of
problems is one of the lowest forms of mathematical research, ... yet its educational
value cannot be overestimated. It is the ladder by which the mind ascends into
higher fields of original research and investigation. Many dormant minds have
been aroused into activity through the mastery of a single problem."
- Benjamin Franklin Finkel
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Need help and encouragement for homeschooling
your high schooler?
Our newest ebook, Homeschooling the High Schooler: From Transcripts
to Graduation, is hot off the press! In this ebook, we've enlisted
homeschool parents, homeschooled high school students themselves, and experts
to share some tips with you.
Our authors share not only the "how-tos" of transcripts, math, science,
and language arts but also why they chose to homeschool through high school, some
of the opportunities they took advantage of along the way, and the blessings they've
reaped from keeping their teens at home for high school.
To order your copy, visit our Schoolhouse
Store! |

If so, you need a copy of Secrets of Successful Homeschooling!
In this e-book, Paul and Gena Suarez, publishers of The Old Schoolhouse Magazine,
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"Every story touched me in one way or another. I found myself wishing
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sons
Affordable and instantly downloadable, this e-book would be perfect to help
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Thank you for reading the TOS Homeschooling for FREE! e-Newsletter
this month. We'll have more exciting FREE stuff for you next month as we focus
on science freebies!
You may forward this e-Newsletter to your friends in its entirety. If you have
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