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The following suggestions are courtesy of the New Jersey Education Association (NJEA)
- Give your child practical experience using mathematics at home. Mention the size of
containers, such as pints of cream and half gallons of milk. Encourage help when you bake,
lay carpet or tile, seed or fertilize the lawn and allow your child to actually measure
ingredients, areas or quantities of material. Use the metric system of measurement to
increase the childs knowledge of and proficiency in the use of the metric system.
- Before a shopping trip, have your child read newspaper ads and price the cost of items
to be purchased. Encourage comparison of price and quantities marked on containers to
determine the best buys. Allow the child to purchase an item and figure out the change to
be received. Other ways to help children apply their growing knowledge of mathematics to
practical situations are: letting them double check the addition on grocery tapes, manage
allowance, read thermometers, barometers or even stop watches. Let them calculate age,
weight, height and dimension or figure gas purchases and mileage, tolls and other trip
expenses. Encourage again the use of the metric system.
- Bingo, dominoes, toy telephones, card games, board games, calendars and clocks with
large numbers all can help you familiarize your child with the world of numbers.
- Put your preschool childs counting ability to work. In preparation for meals, let
the child count out forks for the table, dinner napkins, pieces of cake or any other
quantity.
- If your child is having difficulty with multiplication tables, buy or make flash cards
and use them on a regular basis. Children will enjoy giving answers they know and will
learn more complex problems through drill. Let your child explain the math papers brought
home from school and take time to help with correction and understanding of mistakes.
- Above all, ask and listen to your childs daily experiences. Communications is the
key to successful learning.
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