- HomeschoolMath.net has a host of free worksheets, interactive tutorials and quizzes, curriculum guides, help on teaching, and links for online games. The site owner Maria also runs the Homeschool Math blog.
- Try Cool Math 4 Kids for a host of very colorful, free, interactive math games. Their companion Cool Math site has activities for the age 13 and up crowd.
- At Multiplication.com you can: download flashcards, worksheets and quizzes; find oodles of free resources for teaching the times tables; and find fun, free, colorful math games for kids.
- On the much less colorful front, download a variety of free online graph and grid papers. The variety of papers here is quite surprising - includes celtic knot paper, perspective paper, triangle paper, axonometric paper and tumbling block paper. I'm not sure what you do with all these, but I'm sure your kids will have some creative ideas!
- Personally I enjoy the patterns in mathematics. Boys are often fascinated by codes and ciphers and the accompanying spy stories. Here are some teaching resources for codes and ciphers, or visit Bletchley Park, the home of secret British codebreaking activities during World War II.
- Moving into more advance mathematical concepts, you can find a free online geometry textbook at Learner.org. Mathematics and art are very related. Learn about Fibonacci numbers and the golden section in art, music and architecture, or study geometry in art and architecture.
- Hippocampus has free Algebra courses.
- This Statistics site is not for the faint of heart - see the best and worst of statistical graphics. It's free and you just might learn something. What more could you want?
- Or maybe you'd prefer a little, light, free Calculus. Something new, or indepth and old is good for the brain cells :-)
- Last, but not least, Math Forum - dedicated to the teaching of mathematics.
Got a favorite free math resource link? Please let me know.
Find math stuff and homeschool math stuff at Amazon.com.
See the award winning Usborne Illustrated Dictionary of Math, multiplication wrap ups, learning palette 1st grade math manipulative center. Please ask if you need help or advice on something I've mentioned here.
2 comments:
What a great set of resources you mention there.
Would you consider having a look at my site at http://mathmojo.com, and see if it's worth adding to your list? It's dedicated to having people learn math with methods that magicians use. Lots of ways to look at math that schools usually don't have time to share with students.
BTW, I am a Scotland fan (I actually took a course in the Doric dialect). Glad you like the States!
All the best,
Brian (a.k.a. Professor Homunculus at MathMojo.com )
I have not yet visit all the link but this is something that I want to find. Many thanks. I bookmark your blog. :)
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