How Math Works

by Carol Vorderman

Hardcover, 1996

Status

Available

Local notes

510 Vor (HC)

Barcode

4082

Collection

Publication

Readers Digest (1996), 192 pages

Description

Provides puzzles, tricks, and educational experiments designed to help students ages eight through fourteen discover how math works, with ideas and activities for learning about numbers, proportions, algebra, statistics, measurements, shapes, and logic.

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

192 p.; 8.82 inches

User reviews

LibraryThing member mapalumbo
Wow! What cannot be said about this book? It is packed with Mathematics, History, experiments, and more. It reads more like an informational text than a sequenced story, but it keeps readers with short attention spans (like me) busy.

My copy has a few page references incorrect and some of the
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scientific explanations lack the depth a teacher like me would prefer, but that does not stop me from giving this book 4 out of 5 stars.

If only I had the classroom time to try all of the experiments in this book...
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LibraryThing member JosephMacAdam
This book contains a lot of activities, histories, basic knowledge of a variety of mathematical concepts. The activities in the book are usually productive where they allow students to understand a concept from a less conventional method. Overall, I really enjoyed this book and would recommend it
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to be used for students in the grades of 5th-9th grade. However, I would also recommend that a parent or teacher pick and choose activities from this book.
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LibraryThing member romakerby
This book would be a great add to my classroom library. It gives many experiments students can do related to math to assist them in learning different concepts. I like how the book is arranged from simpler math concepts to slightly more difficult ones. This is similar to grade progression for
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students. I also like how the glossary is very detailed and doesn't just have definitions but figures and visual aids to help students better understand some of the definitions. The book includes many pictures and illustrations to give students a visual of concepts as well as see other kids doing experiments which can possibly show students that the experiments can be done. The book is quite old, so some of the pictures are a little outdated. For example, there is a picture of a kid using a computer and the computer is a very old model computer that today's kids probably have never seen. But as the basis of most math concepts haven't changed, the content is still very useful. The experiments may have to be updated by a teacher that is using them to better fit the interests of today's children.
Overall, I think the book is a great reference for students and teachers.
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Other editions

Pages

192

Rating

½ (7 ratings; 4.7)
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