Homeschool Elementary Math that Prepares Kids For Highschool Algebra and Beyond

Grade school math prep for higher math is actually quite simple. Children
need to see math more than do math.  The basics needed are;

Addition
Subtraction
Multiplication
Division
Fractions
Geometric shapes
Time
Space

Granted that can include a lot of stuff such as mastery of addition includes
knowing the placeholders of base 10 number system. The one’s place, the
ten’s place, etc. Fractions are going to take you into the 1/100 place and
such. But still its addition, start simple and grow.

Basically, all of those concepts can be taught at home without purchasing much at all. Paper, pencil and a clock can get you a long way. But doing math as you go throughout the day gets you a lot further. We wrote a lot on chalk boards and made lots of games out of numbers and shapes and time. We are always noticing shapes and calling them by their correct names. We add as we go along -”We counted 10 steps. There are 5 floors. How many steps are
there to the top?”

One thing we do that I haven’t seen in any curriculum for grade school is to use the alphabet for blank spaces to make formulas.  Use the word ‘formula’
and use X, Y or something else. This is critical to make the move to Algebra easy. Such as

1+ X = 2

Write this on your chalkboard (we wrote it on the driveway), and say something like “what do you need to add to 1 to get 2?”

Out on the driveway it’s a game and a mystery, then when they get to the course called Algebra, they have already done it. We were always told that
children had to reach a certain age to understand this abstract notation. I have found this is not the case. My son could do this as soon as he could
and 1 and 1. I just wrote it with a blank first  1 + ____ = 2 and later with the X and told him the X was the blank. He got that. I left all sorts of
mysteries on the driveway or large cardboard boxes and the chalkboard. He had a blast figuring them out.

See this picture:

This is our son learning sums and geometry. Some of the math is more than he currently comprehends and he has no idea that he’s learning, but when he gets there it won’t scare him or look odd.

We did math this way only through the 2rd grade. Our cover school requires taking the SAT beginning in the 4th grade (each cover is different), so we
decided 3rd grade was a good time to begin expressing math on paper. So after looking around a lot, we finally picked http://www.mathmammoth.com
worksheets. It does a great job of moving into new techniques and concepts as well as continuing to enforce prior skills. It approaches problems in a
common sense way so that the math can easily be applied to the real world. For example, it teaches to add in a way that can be done in your head not
just on paper. Such as adding 16 and 20 you don’t just pull down the 6 on the right side and add the 1 and 2 to get 36.  You add the tens and get 30
and the ones and get 6 for 36. That can be done in your head and is useful for adding in life when paper and pencil and desk are not always readily
available. We do these sheets and still do the activities as well as pointing out math everywhere we see it.

Think of math like you think of language. First you learn to speak it before you read and write it. Kids should be able to speak math and understand it

before they are reading and writing it.  Its not just an activity, it is a language that explains a lot of things in this world that words just can’t do.

Don’t get bogged down on when to move children to Algebra. If they understand the basic math concepts outlined above, then they can go on to
express math in algebraic terms. Its just a more sophisticated way of expressing math. The higher you go in math the more detailed you can express how something in this world works.

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Looking For Feedback

Have you taken an AskDrCallahan course? Did you like it? What would you change about it?

We are putting together some customer comments and we would love to know what you thought about our homeschool DVD math courses.

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Online Classes and Tutoring This Fall

THIS FALL (August 2010) Tim and Cassidy Cash (“the homework help people” for most of you) will open the first AskDrCallahan Homeschool Class and Tutoring Center. We are so excited to finally be able to offer these great AskDrCallahan college prep courses to students “on the ground” and in-person. The classes will be held in Alabaster, AL, but students may also take any of the classes offered as online courses too. This gives you direct access not only to a live teacher for your class experience, but you’re getting hands on help and attention from the people who created these courses. PLUS! the Homework Help staffers that help students over email, will be on hand to offer in-person tutoring services to anyone who might want to take advantage of that. Right now the specific location is TBA, but subject, times, teacher information, as well as information on the online classes are listed below. Find the subject you are interested in and contact us about it to get started. :)

Things To Know Before Taking an AskDrCallahan Course

Classes Available:

Math Classes:

Pre-Algebra

This course will be focused on covering the pre-requisite material for Algebra 1. Students completing this course will be able to move smoothly into Algebra 1. This class is designed for students grade 7-8th.

Course Instructor: Cassidy Cash(support@askdrcallahan.com)

Course Time:

Course Location:

Algebra 1

Algebra 2 With Trig

Geometry

Language Classes:

Spanish 1

Spanish 2

Spanish 3

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Decide Your Math Course Based on Content, Not Publishing Company

When choosing a math course, many parents decide to go with one publishing company and stick with them throughout their student’s education because math courses are assumed to “build on each other”. And yes, math does build on itself, that’s why we have a typical course sequence, but be aware that some companies play the game of writing courses in such a way that you actually need to take their next course to fill in the gaps, but it shouldn’t be this way.

Math is a very real science and the truths you learn in math are the same for everyone. So no matter what publishing company puts them on paper, you should still be learning math.

There is nothing more significant about a good geometry course from company A and a good geometry course from company B as long as both companies A and B cover geometry well. There might be some differences as far as how each company covers the material; one company might provide more example problems than another. One company may have more real life examples than the second company. Or perhaps you like the number of available homework problems in one book over another. Those differences might make your choose Company A over Company B, but there should not be a requirement to take courses from the same publishing company in order to get a good education.

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Using Examples, Tests, and Homework Problems to evaluate a math course

When you are deciding whether or not to use a math course, the Table of Contents is the best place to start (link to table of contents article). But once you’ve evaluated the Table of Contents, there are two other areas to consider:

  1. Example & Homework Problems
  2. Tests

Example and Homework problems in a textbook can give you a good idea of how the key concepts will be covered.  Start by noticing the amount of example problems.

  • Are there enough for your student to be able to follow along with the explanations?
  • Do they provide practice problems that align with the examples?
  • If there aren’t very many example problems per lesson, can you tell why?
  • And if there are only a few examples, are there plenty of identical homework problems your student can practice?

Then ask questions about the Homework Problems

  • Are there review sections in the homework, and are there places to get homework answers?
  • Is the amount of homework problems acceptable?
  • Do the homework problems correspond with the lessons?
  • Are your students able to move smoothly from the lessons to the homework?

These are just some of the questions you will need to ask about a course. You can also use these questions to evaluate what is important to you as a parent or student. Maybe you don’t need a bunch of example problems and you like how Book A covers the material. You find yourself enjoying to read it or you can easily understand their explanations. This level of connectivity with the text might override your desire to have tons of examples, so you’re willing to compromise. Then again, maybe you’d rather sacrifice connectivity with the text in order to have many examples. Still some others will wait it out until they find the course that mixes plenty of examples with connectivity.

The second thing to consider is the Tests. Tests give you a good idea of what the course creators feel are the important ideas to take from the lessons. It also gives you an idea of the difficulty level of the course. Some questions to ask about test:

  • How long are the tests?
  • How often are they to be given?
  • What is the grading system?
  • Are they allowed to use calculators on exams?
  • Where do the problems come from?
  • How much material is covered per test?

What matters to you as a parent will vary with each student, with your own experience, and with each person. What course you ultimately get depends on your priorities as a parent, but ask the right questions about Example and Homework Problems and Tests.

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If I use Homework Help do I still need a solutions manual?

Homework Help WILL work any problem you require step by step, but we are NOT intended to replace a good solutions manual. In fact, we are not ALLOWED to copy the book verbatim, since that would violate Jacobs’ copyright. What we do with step-by-step is work out problems in MORE detail than what the solutions manual provides for students that need it broken down further.

Homework Help is intended to clarify problems you come across when studying your subject. Whether it is math, English, history, or science, if you need help with that subject—we are there to be a virtual tutor and assist you on your way.

We also help parents and students find real world connections to their studies. We assist with project suggestions, project grading guidelines, ideas for how to encourage students to learn when you’ve hit a wall. We provide students with a place to ask all those “why” questions and parents a place to find all the answers to those “why” questions.

If you have trouble with your math problems, if you don’t understand why the solutions manual arrived at their answer, or if you need more detail than what the solutions manual provides, Homework Help is here to help you with all of these things.

We are not intended to replace good resources that are already available. We are simply another great resource you can use. But if all you need is someone to rattle off the answers to your homework problems, then by all means get the book that supplies answers. Get the solutions manual.

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Do I have to buy the whole course kit?

You have plenty of options when it comes to taking our courses. You can buy only the dvds and then borrow the book/solutions manual from a friend.

You can buy the textbook (probably cheaper than from us) on amazon or somewhere similar and borrow the dvds.

You can even buy only the textbook and download our syllabus for free on our product pages.

If you let us know which courses you are wanting to take, we can give you the ISBN numbers for the textbooks and solutions manuals you will need and you can search for them easier on amazon or wherever. Also, you can email us and we can sell you just the textbook and solutions manual. Most of those prices are outlined on our product pages.

Homework Help will support any of these customer options for free. What we do not support for free is if you are using an alternate curriculum. We will support other courses, but we charge for that service. Read more here.


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What grading scale should we use?

We suggest using the point value students make on the exam to decide their grade. What scale you use to determine what letter that number warrants is up to you. However, our Teachers Guides give a detailed outline of how we would assign grades if we are teaching it in a classroom.The teachers guides for each course can be downloaded on our website. Click Products and navigate to the course of your choice.

For parents who are new to homeschooling, or who didn’t know there were scale options, we have listed some popular grading scales here:

The Tens System:

90-100 A

80-89 B

70-79 C

60-69 D

59 and Below F

The Nines System:

92 and above A

83 -91 B

74-82  C

64-73 D

65 and below F

The Eights System 1:

93 and above A

85- 92 B

77-84 C

69-76 D

70 and below F

The Eights System 2:

94 and above A

86- 93 B

78- 85 C

69- 76 C

70 and below F

There isn’t really any indication that any one system is particularly harder than any of the others. In fact some studies show that the Tens System, which most consider the easiest, might actually be the most difficult since that system also accounts for pluses, minues, etc. In addition, the grade depends a lot of the test difficulty level, extra credit, and student ability. As you can see, there are a lot of factors that go into assigning a grade, therefore we prefer to let parents decide what works best for their students.

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Happy Saint Patrick’s Day!

Four Leaf Clovers Math Activity

Saint Patrick’s Day Probability Activity for PreAlgebra and Algebra 1 Students. Of course, we call the “4 of Clubs” a “four of clovers” for this special day, but you get the idea :)

For geometry and calculus students, we haven’t forgotten you!

Visit Our Saint Patrick’s Day Resource Page on Homework Help for more Saint Patrick’s Day ideas.

Special Thanks to Tim Cash for helping us with this video! :0)

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Reviewing for a Test

Hey everybody,

How do you study for a test? Well, I’m just so glad you asked. Here’s what I think:

As far as video reviewing, re-watch any section of the dvds you feel  needs review. Also, The working of practice problems similar to what is on the test is an excellent way to prepare. Some students go back and re-work homework problems–also great.  When I teach my students this course we work the Chapter Review section to prepare for the test. There are many varied methods of preparing for a test and each one works differently for different students. That said, I think that working and grading the Chapter Review section, grading it and identifying weak spots, then going back to those sections in the book to rework problems and re-watching dvd sections as needed, as well as reviewing particularly difficult homework problems are all great ways to get ready for a test. The idea is to focus on the weak spots. I don’t feel it is necessary to review concepts students understand fully.

Also, even though we take our test problems directly from the Chapter Review, working the Chapter Review should not be considered “cheating” and here’s why I say that: The point is that the students learn and that they do well. If they don’t understand the math, they won’t get the problems correct on the test. Once students reach upper level math, it doesn’t matter if they’ve seen the problems previously–or even how many times they’ve seen the problems previously, memorization at this point just isn’t the student’s best friend anymore.  Trust me, I’ve taught this course to several different groups of students in several different schooling situations and the outcome is consistent. We review the Chapter Review section AND I TELL THEM that the problems in the chapter review section are exactly like what’s on the test. I still have students fail. I really didn’t see that as possible, but apparently it is. This shocking (and repetitive occurrence) has cemented my belief that if students understand, they will do well, if they do not understand, they won’t. It really is that simple. Dont be afraid to practice what will be on the test. If nothing else, this method of studying helps eliminate the “bad test taker” moments.

Just because of the sheer volume of problems in the chapter review section, most students are not (and we don’t really recommend) working every single problem there. So the odds of them landing on “the” problem that’s on the test is small, but the probability of them working problems similar in concept is very high–also one of the goals of studying. Especially since the textbooks we’ve chosen often repeat concepts throughout. In addition, this isn’t the “2 + 2 =4″ kind of math. You aren’t going to be able to rely on your calculator or even on your ability to memorize specific problems in order to do well. I would have students who failed my exams even if I gave them the exact test ahead of time. I know you think I’m crazy, but you can trust me, I tried it on a class one time just to confirm my theory.

Please don’t think I’m ok with students failing, that’s not the point. I worked with those failing students to bring up their grades later, and all of that. My point with saying this stuff about studying is to show definitively that studying to understand is the key, not memorization. That’s why working problems is a good way to practice, but at some point you need to give your brain a break and just rest. Don’t focus on working every problem available. If it takes you that many, then more power to you, but if you can work 3 and nail them cold, go for it. Study and practice for comprehension, review where needed, practice what you need, then take the test.

These are just some of our suggestions. If you have other study suggestions you think I should mention, or if you’d like help setting up a “study process” for your specific student, please contact us and let us know.

Oh, and when I was a student, I pretended to be the teacher and taught my schoolwork to my stuffed teddy bears as a way to prepare. I mean, you never learn as much as when you teach, right? Well, it worked then too! :) More on that later….

hwhelp@askdrcallahan .com

God Bless,

Cassidy Cash

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