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  edusearch articles
You are here > Sections > Associations/Orgs > Family Maths Charitable Trust

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Family Maths Charitable Trust Article images
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Author : Edusearch







Created : 24 May 2003
Last Revision : 25 May 2003
Help Your Child with Maths through:

- participating in after-school parent/child programs such as Family Maths, Family Science;
-engaging with your children appropriate family games, puzzles, experiments, designing and model building activities that use a variety of mathematics, science and technology skills;
--discussing regularly with your children their classroom activities, and listening carefully to their explanations of what has been learned;
-providing time, a place and encouragement for doing homework assignments;
- encouraging your children to persist when the work becomes difficult; not to expect parents or tutors to do the work for them;
- participating in parent-teacher conferences;
-taking advantage of opportunities to visit classes;
-celebrating with your children the many small successes in their learning;
- encouraging and expecting them to be able to do/solve the problems/activities.

Parents, schools and the community need to do all they can to ensure that our children are leaving school with a positive attitude to mathematics.

We do not accept that it is socially acceptable to say �l am no good at maths�.

Family Maths Charitable Trust

Post: PO Box 33 1591 Takapuna New Zealand
Tel: 09 445 8312 Fax: 09 445 8472
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.familymaths.org.nz


On this website there is information on Family Maths, newsletters, courses and super little maths challenges fopr the whole family. This is an example:

TRIHEX


Why:
To investigate game strategies



Equipment: Playing board 10 counters (5 blue, 5 Red)
How:
� Players take turns putting a counter of their own colour on a cell on the board.
� The first player to get three counters, of their own colour, in a straight line is the winner.
Think:
Can you find a winning strategy?
Are there some cells better to use than others?
Does the player playing first have a greater chance of winning?
Is this a fair game?






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