JavaScript is required for many of our website features (such as signing in)
Your web browser either does not support JavaScript, or scripts are being blocked. Please turn on Javascript or use a web browser that supports JavaScript.
You may refer to
THIS ARTICLE
for instructions on how to enable JavaScript on your browser.
Hi Guest!
Sign in
Register
Help
Hi
Member
!
Account
My Account
My Files
Purchases
Newsletters
Affiliate Program
Logout
Help
BrillKids
Affiliate
BrillBaby
Forum
Shop
Library
Trial
Register as a BrillKids Member
Your Account Profile
About Us
Charity Foundation
Local Distributors
Affiliated Learning Centers
Affiliate Program
Newsletters
Contact Us
Little Reader Library
Downloads by Subject Category
Downloads by Language
Little Reader FREE Trial
Get Little Reader
Little Math Library
Downloads by File Type
Downloads by Language
Take a FREE Trial
Get Little Math
Free Format Downloads
Flash Cards by Subject
Flash Cards by Language
PPT Files by Subject
PPT Files by Language
Children's eBooks
Activity Sheets by Subject
Activity Sheets by Language
Infant Stimulation - Coming Soon!
Video Gallery
Early Learning - General
Teaching Babies to Read
Teaching Babies Math
Teaching Babies Music
Teaching Babies to Sign + Speak
Teaching Encyclopedic Knowledge
Teaching Other Topics
Prenatal Education
Homeschooling
Product Discussions + Reviews
Points Redemption
Spend Loyalty Points
My Redeemed Coupons
Get BrillKids Discount Coupons
Buy BrillKids Products
Search
MY PROFILE
Welcome,
Guest
.
Please sign in or you can
click here
to register an account for free.
Did not receive activation email?
Email:
Password:
FORUM NEWS + ANNOUNCEMENTS
[6 Sep] Get the BEST of BrillKids at a VERY SPECIAL price (for a limited time only!) (More...)
[05 Apr] BrillKids HQ is relocating: there may be minor shipping delays (More...)
[17 Jan] Looking for WINK TO LEARN coupons? New coupons now available for redemption! (More...)
[22 Jul] More SPEEKEE coupons available at the BrillKids Redemption Center! (More...)
[22 Mar] Important Announcement Regarding License Keys and Usage of BrillKids Products (More...)
[26 Feb] MORE Wink to Learn coupons available at the BrillKids Redemption Center! (More...)
[08 Jun] NEW: Vietnamese Curriculum for Little Reader! (More...)
[15 May] Hello Pal Social Language Learning App Has Launched! (More...)
[3 Mar] Update: Hello Pal now Beta Testing! (What We've Been Up To) (More...)
[11 Feb] Sign up for our Little Reader Vietnamese Beta Testing Program! (Sign ups open until FEB. 15, 2015 ONLY!) (More...)
[26 Jan] More Wink to Learn coupons available at our Redemption Center! (More...)
[18 Nov] Get your Arabic Curriculum for Little Reader! (More...)
[21 Oct] EEECF News: Get 30% Off from Hoffman Academy! (More...)
[22 Sep] The EEECF is now registered in the UN and we now accept donations! (More...)
[13 Aug] The Early Education for Every Child Foundation (EEECF) is now a registered charity on AMAZON SMILE! (More...)
[12 Aug] ALL-NEW Transportation & Traffic Category Pack for Little Reader!(More...)
[21 Jul] Get 10% off our NEW Actions and Motions Category Pack for Little Reader! (More...)
[14 Jul] Get 10% off BrillKids Books! IT'S THE BRILLKIDS SUMMER BOOK SALE! (More...)
[25 Jun] BrillKids store and website now available for viewing in Arabic! (More...)
[09 Jun] Get your Russian Curriculum for Little Reader! 10% off introductory price! (More...)
[09 May] Free Little Reader, Price Changes, and Promotional Discounts! (More...)
[28 Apr] Get BabyPlus Discount Coupons at the BrillKids Coupon Redemption Center (More...)
[13 Mar] Get your FREE Chinese Curriculum Update for Little Reader! (More...)
[20 Feb] FINALLY, introducing our Spanish Curriculum for Little Reader! (More...)
[24 Feb] We're looking for Content Checkers and Testers for our Arabic Curriculum! (More...)
[10 Feb] Volunteer with the Early Education for Every Child Foundation (EEECF) (More...)
[24 Jan] Check out our NEW Thai Curriculum Pack for Little Reader! (More...)
[20 Jan] Get Discounts from BrillKids Product Partners! (More...)
[10 Jan] Introducing our New Category Pack: Exotic & Wild Animals! (More...)
[27 Nov] Sign up for our LR Spanish Beta Testing Program (LIMITED SLOTS ONLY!) (More...)
[19 Dec] Merry Christmas and Happy New Year! NOTE: BrillKids office closed on holidays (More...)
[16 Oct] Announcing the WINNERS of our BrillKids Summer Video Contest 2013! (More...)
[04 Oct] Get Little Reader Touch on your Android device! (More...)
[19 Jul] BrillKids products now available for purchase at our Russian Online Store! (More...)
[31 Jul] BrillKids Video Contest Summer 2013 - Deadline EXTENDED to August 31st! (More...)
[20 Jun] Join the BrillKids Video Contest Summer 2013! (More...)
[17 Jun] India Partners: BrillKids products now once again available in India! (More...)
[22 Apr] Little Reader Touch Version 2 Now Available (More...)
[21 Mar] French Curriculum available now for Little Reader! (More...)
[16 Apr] Spain Partners: BrillKids products now Online in Spain! (More...)
[07 Feb] Update to Little Math Version 2 now! (More...)
[07 Feb] Check out the *NEW* BrillKids Downloads Library! (More...)
[27 Feb] Singapore Partners: BrillKids products now Online in Singapore! (More...)
[20 Feb] Vietnam Partners: BrillKids products now Online in Vietnam! (More...)
[22 Jan] Important: About Sharing License Keys (More...)
[07 Nov] Update to Little Reader v3! (More...)
[19 Oct] We're Looking for Translators for our Little Reader Software (More...)
[15 Oct] More Right Brain Kids coupons available at our Redemption Center! (More...)
[25 Sep] CONTEST: Get A Free Little Musician by helping EEECF reach your friends and colleagues! (More...)
[17 Sep] Give a child the gift of literacy this Christmas: 20,000 children need your help! (More...)
[29 Aug] Little Musician wins Dr. Toy Awards! (More...)
[29 Aug] VIDEOS: Perfect Pitch at 2.5y, and compilation of Little Musician toddlers! (More...)
[09 Aug] Get Soft Mozart Coupons from the Points Redemption Center! (More...)
[03 Aug] Welcome NEW FORUM MODERATORS: Mela Bala, Mandabplus3, Kerileanne99, and Kmum! (More...)
[03 Aug] Winners of the Little Reader Video Contest (Part 5)! (More...)
[25 Jul] Bianca's Story - What happens 10+ years after learning to read as a baby/toddler (More...)
[27 Jun] Updates on our Early Education for Every Child Foundation (EEECF) (More...)
[27 Jun] Join the Little Reader Video Contest (Part 5) (More...)
[04 Jun] Being a Successful Affiliate - Now easier than ever before! (More...)
[18 May] LITTLE MUSICIAN - NOW LAUNCHED! (More...)
[30 Apr] Winners of the Little Reader Video Contest! (More...)
[28 Apr] The Early Education for Every Child Foundation - Help Us Make a Difference (More...)
[20 Apr] Little Reader Curricula on your iPad or iPhone - now possible with iAccess! (More...)
[12 Apr] LITTLE MUSICIAN - now in OPEN BETA TESTING (with a complete curriculum) (More...)
[12 Mar] *NEW* Little Reader Content Packs now available! (More...)
[01 Feb] Join the March 2012 Homeschooling Contest: Create a Monthly Theme Unit! (More...)
[27 Jan] Join the BrillKids Foundation as a Volunteer! (More...)
[20 Jan] BrillKids Featured Parent: Tonya's Teaching Story (More...)
[17 Dec] Dr. Richard Gentry joins the BrillKids Blog Team! (Read Interview on Early Reading) (More...)
[08 Dec] Little Reader Touch promo EXTENDED + Lucky Draw winners (More...)
[01 Dec] Affiliate Success Story - How Elle Made $4,527 in Sales in just 30 days (More...)
[22 Nov] Little Reader Touch now available in the App Store! (More...)
[09 Nov] Winners of the September 2011 Video Contest (More...)
[01 Nov] Another free seminar and updates from Jones Geniuses (More...)
[16 Sep] SPEEKEE is now a BrillKids partner product! Get Speekee coupons at the Coupon Redemption Center! (More...)
[02 Sep] Little Reader Wins Another Two Awards! (Mom's Best Award & TNPC Seal of Approval) (More...)
[05 Aug] Little Reader Deluxe Wins the Tillywig Brain Child Award! (More...)
[28 Jul] LITTLE MUSICIAN beta-testing NOW OPEN! - Sign up here. (More...)
[14 Jul] Little Reader Wins Another Award! (PTPA Seal of Approval) (More...)
[13 Jul] Jones Geniuses FREE Seminars & news of Fall classes (More...)
[30 Jun] Little Reader Wins 2011 Creative Child Awards! (More...)
[11 May] The *NEW* Little Reader Deluxe - now available! (More...)
[06 May] Do you blog about early learning? - Join the BrillKids Blogger Team! (More...)
[21 Apr] Aesop's Fables vol. 2 - *NEW* Storybooks from BrillKids! (More...)
[15 Apr] BrillKids Foundation - Help Us Make a Difference (More...)
[08 Apr] Get READEEZ Discount Coupons at the Forum Shop! (More...)
[06 Apr] The new
Parents of Children with Special Needs
board is now open! (More...)
[06 Apr] Join the Jones Geniuses online workshop for BrillKids members this April 21st! [FULLY BOOKED] (More...)
[04 Apr] Get TUNE TODDLERS Discount Coupons at the Forum Shop! (More...)
[21 Mar] BrillKids Discount Coupons - Finally Here! (More...)
[21 Mar] BrillKids on Facebook... We've MOVED! (More...)
[15 Mar] Get KINDERBACH Discount Coupons at the Forum Shop! (More...)
[08 Mar] WINNERS OF THE VIDEO CONTEST: You, Your Baby and Little Reader Part 2! (More...)
[07 Mar] Please welcome our NEW FORUM MODERATORS: Skylark, Tanikit, TmS, and TeachingMyToddlers! (More...)
[22 Feb] Do you BLOG? Join the BrillKids Blogger Team! (More...)
[11 Feb] Affiliate Program – Use BrillKids Banners to promote your affiliate link in your blogs and websites! (More...)
[31 Jan] Important: Please Upgrade to Little Reader v2.0 (More...)
[26 Jan] BrillKids Blog - Criticisms of Teaching Your Baby To Read (More...)
[21 Jan] Share your Little Reader Success Story! (More...)
[08 Jan] Little Reader available on the iPad today! (More...)
[17 Dec] Aesop's Fables vol. 1 - New storybooks from BrillKids! (More...)
[13 Dec] Infant Stimulation Cards - New at the BrillKids Store! (More...)
[08 Dec] Christmas Sale: Give the gift of learning with BrillKids! (More...)
[29 Nov] Upgrade to Little Reader 2.0 [BETA] Now! (More...)
[19 Nov] Get Discounts for products from JONES GENIUSES! (More...)
[17 Nov] Join the HOMESCHOOLING CONTEST: Create a Monthly Theme Unit! (More...)
[08 Nov] Piano Wizard Academy Offer - Exclusive to BrillKids Members! (More...)
[23 Oct] Should music be a birthright? Is music education for everyone? (More...)
[20 Oct] Introducing the BrillKids Presentation Binder Set! (More...)
[12 Oct]Get to Know Other BrillKids Parents in Your Area (More...)
[14 Sep] Teaching your kids about music - Why is it important? (More...)
[10 Sep] The new ENCYCLOPEDIC KNOWLEDGE Collaborations board is now open! (More...)
[10 Sep] Meet other BrillKids Members In Your Area! (More...)
[27 Aug] Traditional Chinese Curriculum Add-On Pack for Little Reader - Now Available! (More...)
[20 Aug] Little Reader Chinese Curriculum Add-on pack - Now Available! (More...)
[5 Aug] Take Advantage of our Special Affiliate Program Promotion! (More...)
[3 Aug] Encyclopedic Knowledge Categories for FREE, made by all of us! Please join in! (More...)
[16 Jul] WINNERS OF THE VIDEO CONTEST: You, your baby and Little Reader! (More...)
[24 Jun] Be a BrillKids Affiliate and Get Rewarded! (More...)
[24 Jun] Need help from Native Speakers of
SPANISH
,
RUSSIAN
and
ARABIC
for Little Reader curriculum!
[01 Jun] Deadline for Submission of Entries for the LR Video Contest - Extended Until June 30! (More...)
[19 May] Facebook "LIKE" buttons are now in BrillBaby! (More...)
[25 Mar] Introducing the all new Little Reader Deluxe Kit from BrillKids! (More...)
[18 Mar] More Signing Time Coupons available at our Forum Shop! (More...)
[11 Mar] BrillKids Discount Coupons - Coming Soon! (More...)
[09 Mar] Little Math 1.6 and Semester 2 are now available! (More...)
BrillKids Forum
>
Early Learning - General Discussions
>
We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
Pages:
1
...
17
18
[
19
]
20
21
...
31
Go Down
« previous
next »
Author
Topic: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math. (Read 409420 times)
Tweet
Digg
del.icio.us
Robert Levy
Posts: 136
Karma: 135
Re: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
«
Reply #270 on:
March 17, 2013, 02:29:34 PM »
As far as keeping track of the Saxon work, I had David do the work on loose leaf paper and then put it into a binder when he finished a section. That seemed to work well. With more than one kid, then obviously more than one binder.
I agree that once a kid is proficient on math facts Saxon will pick up from there, with Saxon 54. As others said, Saxon covers a lot more than just number manipulation, it basically covers everything. I think that I said earlier on this thread that, after David had been through a few books, I went to a bookstore and looked at a study guide for one of our state tests (Texas). I was blown away by it, because it looked like John Saxon had simply copied his book - I couldn't find one question in that guide that was missed by Saxon. And keep in mind that I had been desperately searching for something that could actually teach David math, and I looked at a lot of stuff before I stumbled into Saxon. Just about everything talked about how much fun their particular approach was. That sent my defenses because I know that learning math is not fun - or at least fun in the way they conveyed. It is tedious and tiring. About the only way it can be "fun" is the joy when the kid accomplishes something...but that still isn't fun until it's over - so still not fun while they're learning.
The saddest thing for this country was how the Big Education tore down Saxon prevented it from taking over in math - they had to know what was possible, which is why that bunch had to do what they did.
As far as Glenn Beck - I don't follow him, but on stuff I've heard him talk about, I have yet to see where he's been wrong on just about anything. The reason that I don't follow him is that it's too depressing - depressing that he's almost always right, and depressing that he's been marginalized at the same time.
Logged
linzy
Posts: 638
Karma: 249
Baby: 3
Latest: 9y 6m 8d
Re: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
«
Reply #271 on:
March 17, 2013, 07:45:00 PM »
nee,
I think it is important for them to have a solid grasp of their math facts (i.e. they can calculate the right answer within a few seconds) even if they are not completely memorized. The program we use for the math facts is called sterling math facts. It costs like $10.
You can chose individual facts to work on, or ranges, or all of one type of equation or all equations or solve for an addend/multiplier (like an algebra problem). You can also chose the amount of time they have to answer each problem and the number of problems. It keeps track of missed problems so you can do a set of the most commonly missed, or make sure a certain percentage of each sets problems are the ones you child misses regularly. You can then look at their results in a pie graph or in a graph with time as the x axis to see how they are improving.
We do 250 problems a day for my 6 year old. He does all add/sub/mult/div 0-12. We use a time out of 8 seconds, but his average time per a problem is 4 seconds.
We start with the Sterling Math facts, then he does the warm up math facts page from Saxon, then he reads the chapter, he then does the mental math/problem solving, lesson review and finishes up with the 30 problems.
We use either the forms from the back of the tests/worksheets book or a form I found online for him to write his answers on or one I found online (I'll attach to this post). My husband or I correct it and then he works through the corrections on his own looking up the ones he missed if he didn't understand it, usually it is silly mistakes from having messy handwriting.
Any he misses after the second time through we watch him work to see where he is going wrong and redirect him. Usually however, when he does it with us watching he is more careful and will get it right.
Logged
Our early education blog: rogueed.blogspot.com
LDSMom
Posts: 207
Karma: 75
Baby: 1
Re: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
«
Reply #272 on:
March 17, 2013, 11:28:27 PM »
Linzy - we've been using Sterling Math for my son, he was doing great on easy ones like +1 and +2 but now is struggling with +3. Did you work on memorizing the facts before having them use it, or do you just let them keep getting the wrong answer until they memorize the right one? do you let them count on fingers, use a number line, abacus, teach them the math dots, etc? just curious what your process is there. Thanks for any advice you can give!
Logged
Mandabplus3
Posts: 1772
Karma: 232
Baby: 3
Re: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
«
Reply #273 on:
March 18, 2013, 12:27:34 PM »
Nee your focus on math facts and math facts only is a very sound plan. I am considering this for my boy but I think he likes math too much...he will need something else too. So I was thinking through what else is useful for Saxon success and I decided the only thing it doesn't teach is " how to think" it doesn't teach the problem solving skill of thinking through a possible route to an answer.
Basically I concluded that math facts plus a few random word problems throughout the day and a fairly solid idea of calendars is all that's needed.
Math facts should include halves and quarters of 100 ( and 1000 while you are at it) to save you time later.
The calendar stuff needed is days of the week months of the years and that 30 days has September song.
Yes it truly is a self taught math course. I almost never help my kids out. They just learn it then do it. They fix their own mistakes easily enough and I rarely have to help them get to an answer. Even my 7 year old is mostly independant. She just likes company while she does it.
Logged
linzy
Posts: 638
Karma: 249
Baby: 3
Latest: 9y 6m 8d
Re: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
«
Reply #274 on:
March 18, 2013, 11:33:53 PM »
LDS Mom,
For my older son he had already been using flashcards before we switched over. Our problem was that he would dawdle with the flashcards forever, hence the timeout feature is very helpful.
For my 3 year old, I put the time out at 30-45 seconds. The first few times through the new problems I read it out and make it easier to understand. So I'll say for 3+1 "If you have 3 and I give you one more, how many do you have?, or What's one more then 3?, or What come one after 3?, one, two, three _____? Then I'll help him type it in. After we've done it a few times, I just let him get it wrong and see the answer and type it in right himself. I think lots of repetition will help it really sink in.
With my older son we let him "figure out" the problems, and now he often will go to calculating first even if he knows the answer. With my younger I"d rather he just learn them by heart as an instant response.
Logged
Our early education blog: rogueed.blogspot.com
Robert Levy
Posts: 136
Karma: 135
Re: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
«
Reply #275 on:
March 20, 2013, 12:43:06 AM »
Interesting tidbit today at work:
So far, at work, and beyond, there have been a grand total of two people that have asked how David managed to get so far ahead for his age, while hundreds of people (at least) know of him. The rest, I speculate, figure that Einstein or someone like him transplanted some brain matter into David, and therefore there is no way that their kids could ever hope to achieve the same. The two people are a Chinese immigrant in New Jersey and a Russian immigrant here in Houston that I work with (I've mentioned the Russian before, here).
Anyway, the Chinese immigrant got a bit weird and my wife is no longer in contact with her, but the Russian woman, that I work with, seems to understand the importance of parents providing primary instruction and has talked with me a bunch about David. So I ran into her today and she quickly mentioned that, now, 11 more people in her Russian group (I assume mothers of young children) are now using Saxon Math. She said that was because I told her about it, and then the other 11 parents saw it, and immediately concluded that was exactly what they were looking for (keep in mind, they all, likely, speak and understand English fluently). So they saw Saxon Math and, I suspect, the way they were taught came to mind, and they knew that Saxon was the way to go. In Russia, they didn't waste time trying to convince kids of that Che and Mandela were great mathematical minds - instead they just taught math.
I plan to ask more questions the next time I see her. This country may yet be saved, but it will only be due to parents that take the primary education (reading and math) of their kids into their own hands.
Logged
Mela Bala
Posts: 493
Karma: 108
Baby: 1
Re: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
«
Reply #276 on:
March 20, 2013, 03:08:36 AM »
Quote from: Robert Levy on March 20, 2013, 12:43:06 AM
Interesting tidbit today at work:
So far, at work, and beyond, there have been a grand total of two people that have asked how David managed to get so far ahead for his age, while hundreds of people (at least) know of him. The rest, I speculate, figure that Einstein or someone like him transplanted some brain matter into David, and therefore there is no way that their kids could ever hope to achieve the same. The two people are a Chinese immigrant in New Jersey and a Russian immigrant here in Houston that I work with (I've mentioned the Russian before, here).
Anyway, the Chinese immigrant got a bit weird and my wife is no longer in contact with her, but the Russian woman, that I work with, seems to understand the importance of parents providing primary instruction and has talked with me a bunch about David. So I ran into her today and she quickly mentioned that, now, 11 more people in her Russian group (I assume mothers of young children) are now using Saxon Math. She said that was because I told her about it, and then the other 11 parents saw it, and immediately concluded that was exactly what they were looking for (keep in mind, they all, likely, speak and understand English fluently). So they saw Saxon Math and, I suspect, the way they were taught came to mind, and they knew that Saxon was the way to go. In Russia, they didn't waste time trying to convince kids of that Che and Mandela were great mathematical minds - instead they just taught math.
I plan to ask more questions the next time I see her. This country may yet be saved, but it will only be due to parents that take the primary education (reading and math) of their kids into their own hands.
Thanks so much for sharing this with us. It always makes my day better hearing about things like this. Especially since a friend of mine who teaches in the school system has told me its no longer about educating children it's all about the numbers. She is getting tired of fighting the system and is being looked down upon by her colleagues all because she cares that each of her students are not only becoming familiar with but are learning and understanding what she is teaching.
Logged
http://www.youtube.com/user/MelaluvBaby?feature=mhee
\"Preserving Tomorrow\'s World... Today\"
www.humaxx.com
www.arctech.com
linzy
Posts: 638
Karma: 249
Baby: 3
Latest: 9y 6m 8d
Re: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
«
Reply #277 on:
March 20, 2013, 04:21:51 AM »
Yes, I read obsessively about the state of education in our country and I don't know why. It only depresses me. Here locally there are 35 kids per a class with one teacher, a teacher I know was saying that not even half the kids even turn in their homework, so the idea of teaching kids individually or at their level or spending time trying to challenge kids that are ahead is laughable. She just wants to get most of them close to grade level and is grateful for the ones who are above grade level, because she figures they will take care of themselves and even if they don't make gains they will be where they need to be to advance. Luckily we are homeschooling, but it still is so incredibly sad to me, I just wish I could do something, I know it's not abusive but it feels like it sometimes to me.
Logged
Our early education blog: rogueed.blogspot.com
MummyRoo
Posts: 305
Karma: 58
Baby: 1
Re: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
«
Reply #278 on:
March 20, 2013, 11:50:55 AM »
All the Russian parents I knew when I taught in Moscow were a little scary-obsessed with their kids getting perfect grades and working hard at school, so I'm not overly surprised that the Russian group would start doing Saxon. Especially considering that the schools generally stream with a maths or humanities focus. The maths stream in the school I worked at was teaching 15 year olds what I didn't cover until 18 (and both schools were in the top handful for the respective countries).
Logged
www.dancingwithdinos.blogspot.com
nee1
Posts: 344
Karma: 96
Re: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
«
Reply #279 on:
March 20, 2013, 06:06:49 PM »
Quote from: Mandabplus3 on March 18, 2013, 12:27:34 PM
Nee your focus on math facts and math facts only is a very sound plan. I am considering this for my boy but I think he likes math too much...he will need something else too. So I was thinking through what else is useful for Saxon success and I decided the only thing it doesn't teach is " how to think" it doesn't teach the problem solving skill of thinking through a possible route to an answer.
Basically I concluded that math facts plus a few random word problems throughout the day and a fairly solid idea of calendars is all that's needed.
Math facts should include halves and quarters of 100 ( and 1000 while you are at it) to save you time later.
The calendar stuff needed is days of the week months of the years and that 30 days has September song.
Yes it truly is a self taught math course. I almost never help my kids out. They just learn it then do it. They fix their own mistakes easily enough and I rarely have to help them get to an answer. Even my 7 year old is mostly independant. She just likes company while she does it.
Mandab, if you need a good source of story problems for your boy, you might want to look at Ray's New Primary Arithmetic. Excellent vintage book that teaches mastery of math facts but with use of story problems. That might serve as a stop gap for your boy while he learns the math facts by rote. There is a FREE copy online here -
http://archive.org/details/raysnewprimarya00raygoog
. To download a pdf, click ``All Files: HTTPS'' on the left hand side of the page. You'll find several file formats. One of those is a pdf.
I've gone through all the lessons in Saxon 54 and 65, and there are loads of word problems there. So Saxon teaches thinking. Calendars are covered in 65, with explanations of leap year, decade, century, months, days, etc. Fractions are also explained in 65, etc, etc.
As for the idea of focussing on math facts and math facts alone, I learnt that from the Robinson yahoo group. Loads of those parents focus on that alone. (According to Robinson, it can take a while for a child to master multiplication tables, division and subtraction, and addition). So those parents focus on just that, using math flashcards and programs such as Sterling Math or the free flashcard program (
www.xtramath.org
). Once the child masters his facts, they move the child straight to 54. And Robinson says in that video on his website (at 29.27 minutes), that Saxon 54 was the first introductory book John Saxon wrote; and that Saxon K- 3 were simply busy work introduced by the publishers and padded out to fit the public school grade levels.
On this thread, Linzy explains more on math facts and how she used them to move to 54. Link -
http://forum.brillkids.com/teaching-your-older-child/swann-family-10-children-with-ma-at-age-16
!-book-review-and-discussion-thread/msg94278/#msg94278. Thank you so much, Linzy.
Logged
nee1
Posts: 344
Karma: 96
Re: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
«
Reply #280 on:
March 20, 2013, 06:33:19 PM »
Quote from: Robert Levy on March 20, 2013, 12:43:06 AM
Interesting tidbit today at work:
So far, at work, and beyond, there have been a grand total of two people that have asked how David managed to get so far ahead for his age, while hundreds of people (at least) know of him. The rest, I speculate, figure that Einstein or someone like him transplanted some brain matter into David, and therefore there is no way that their kids could ever hope to achieve the same. The two people are a Chinese immigrant in New Jersey and a Russian immigrant here in Houston that I work with (I've mentioned the Russian before, here).
Anyway, the Chinese immigrant got a bit weird and my wife is no longer in contact with her, but the Russian woman, that I work with, seems to understand the importance of parents providing primary instruction and has talked with me a bunch about David. So I ran into her today and she quickly mentioned that, now, 11 more people in her Russian group (I assume mothers of young children) are now using Saxon Math. She said that was because I told her about it, and then the other 11 parents saw it, and immediately concluded that was exactly what they were looking for (keep in mind, they all, likely, speak and understand English fluently). So they saw Saxon Math and, I suspect, the way they were taught came to mind, and they knew that Saxon was the way to go. In Russia, they didn't waste time trying to convince kids of that Che and Mandela were great mathematical minds - instead they just taught math.
I plan to ask more questions the next time I see her. This country may yet be saved, but it will only be due to parents that take the primary education (reading and math) of their kids into their own hands.
Robert,
I agree with you. I've gone through Saxon 65, and it resonated with me. I kept thinking ``that was exactly how I was taught math''. I saw those standard algorithms for division and multiplication alongside very clear explanations of the steps, just the way I was taught. There was no fuzzy new math stuff or the teaching of 50 different ways to do addition.
And there is another thing I've always pondered. Despite the promises of new math proponents (deeper math understanding, conceptual knowledge, blah, blah, blah), where are the Newtons, the Einsteins, the Eulers, that new math was supposed to produce? I haven’t heard of any yet, years after the implementation of new math. Rather, we are having poorer and poorer results in math. Food for thought.
Each time I think of the ``discovery'' method for math, your amazon review here comes to mind.
Quote
I'm an engineer with 2 college degrees and a professional engineering license, so I knew what my kid needed to learn. When I went through my education, we learned the great names in math, like Pythagoras, Newton, and Euler, who had made great discoveries contributing to the field. I noted that my kid's name was not among them, so I decided that it was probably best to leave the discoveries to those people, while my kid simply took advantage of the discoveries and had the material taught to him. I knew that it wouldn't be a lot of "fun", but I wasn't particularly interested in trying to make math fun - I have enough common sense to know that kids are learning little, if anything, if they are having a lot of fun.
Other than Singapore Math, Saxon is the only method left in the United States that still uses the "Direct Instruction" method (memorizing times tables, etc.), as opposed to the "Discovery" method (where kids can spend 2 weeks coming up with different ways to solve 8 times 7). Direct Instruction is the traditional way to learn math, and I still haven't seen any data show why we, as a country, abandoned it (other than having our math scores drop to the bottom of the world).
While our child is not a genius, he was able to complete this book, plus the next 3 books prior to Algebra 1/2 in just over a year (and well before the material covered in school). That pretty much assured him never having to worry about his math education. I will always be indebted to John Saxon for his genius in writing these books.
Link to the review -
http://www.amazon.com/review/REDQUKUP25PSG/ref=cm_cr_pr_cmt?ie=UTF8&ASIN=1565775031&nodeID=&tag=&linkCode#wasThisHelpful
.
«
Last Edit: March 20, 2013, 08:57:49 PM by nee1
»
Logged
Mandabplus3
Posts: 1772
Karma: 232
Baby: 3
Re: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
«
Reply #281 on:
March 21, 2013, 10:39:45 AM »
Nee don't get me wrong I am not suggesting ANY of those things are missing from. Saxon 5/4 but just that kids will need some basic understanding of them before hitting Saxon 5/4 in order to be able to do the questions. I know Saxon has all the answers for the calender stuff. But uTube problem is there is only one line telling the kids which months have 30 days and which ones have 31. Now yes they can read this chapter and answer all the questions, even flipping back through the book when they forget it in 3 days time BUT realistically it takes more than just reading one sentance a couple of times to remember which months have how many days.
As to the teaching thinking...lets see if I can explain this one... Children need to have some idea of how to manipulate numbers and number patterns to do Saxon 5/4. Even if they know their math facts by heart they need some critical thinking ability to complete even the patterns in the 3 rd chapter. Complete this pattern 3,6,9,------,15 or 24,20,------,14. Kids who can't think mathematically will come unstuck fast. They might also read the word problems and not have a clue where to start to solve the problem. I do believe that if you are willing to sit and work with your children thought he first 10 chapters then the children WILL learn the skills needed just by doing the questions. ( yes particularly the word problems) they just might need some initial support to learn HOW to think them through. I hope that makes sense?
Thanks for the word problem link. I will definitely check that one out!
Logged
nee1
Posts: 344
Karma: 96
Re: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
«
Reply #282 on:
March 21, 2013, 11:02:35 AM »
I get it.
But I don't think it takes critical thinking to understand the sequence you posted. A child that has all multiplication tables pat down will immediately recognise that sequence (3,6,9,------,15) to be the 3's counting up and the next one (24, 20, ....) to be the 4's counting down
«
Last Edit: March 21, 2013, 11:31:27 AM by nee1
»
Logged
Tamsyn
Posts: 553
Karma: 128
Baby: 5
Re: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
«
Reply #283 on:
March 21, 2013, 11:26:24 AM »
Ray's New Primary Arithmetic looks FANTASTIC! 18 weeks to Saxon 5/4! Thank you so much! I've been ho-humming with math with no solid plan aside from "work on basic facts so we can get to 5/4". This is the step-by-step practice we need.
I've been eying TMT's approach as well though. I think my son would really enjoy doing the word problems in that book using the soroban to help.
http://teachingmytoddlers.blogspot.com/2013/03/learning-soroban-japanese-abacus.html
Logged
www.teaching-children-music.com
www.professional-mothering.com
Robert Levy
Posts: 136
Karma: 135
Re: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.
«
Reply #284 on:
March 22, 2013, 12:18:44 AM »
Hi people,
When I hear the term "Higher Order Thinking Skills" it makes me cringe. The term, I believe, was popularized in the 1960s and just about everything from that time frame has been a disaster for the country, with the exception of the space program, and that was due to people educated well before the 1960s.
My first thought with the term "Higher Order Thinking Skills" (abbreviated as HOTS for now on) is that it is a term used by the education establishment to make parents feel inferior or incompetent when discussing the education of their kids. As far as I can tell, what the establishment says is that you can either have "Rote Memorization" (RM) or HOTS, but not both. RM includes things like learning addition/multiplication tables, doing math by hand, and, I guess, phonics. To them, calculators take care of all RM math tasks, so why bother teaching kids that material. For reading, they look at phonics as stupid, because they all read by sight, like us too (hence the push for "Sight Words"; how we got here doesn't seem to matter to them).
In the case of math, I didn't stumble on to Saxon until David was 6.5 years old (with Saxon 54), and he still managed to get 8 years ahead of his age level in short order. That gave him several years prior to Saxon to get through the RM part. My point is that there is room for both and I think one can safely say that RM skills are very, very good to have, since you won't have a calculator with you every moment of your life and you don't want your kid to look illiterate when he needs a calculator to add 12 and 17. On top of that, there's no assurance that a calculator will always be permitted in every scenario of your kid's life. For example, the college where my mother taught, New Jersey Institute of Technology, terminated the use of calculators on math tests while she was there. The kids there simply did not know arithmetic and the college did not want to be handing engineering degrees to them, setting them into a profession where mistakes cost lives. As to those kids, well, New Jersey introduces calculators in math classes in Kindergarten (or at least did, at the time), so I just feel sorry for the kids.
As to HOTS overall, I kind of look at it as a side effect from using a good curriculum...not a primary purpose. I think that I mentioned this earlier, but in David's case, I had to make a call as to whether to stall his RM development in favor of HOTS, or to ignore RM. Specifically, he had no clue what 3 plus 4 meant, and as hard as I tried to teach him (i.e., apples, oranges, things like that) it was was hopeless. I finally concluded that he would be better off if he could manipulate numbers first, and then figure out what it all meant later. Likewise with reading - I didn't care if he understood the words, because I knew that he had plenty of time for learning that. All I wanted when he was little was to simply be able to read the words. I feel that I was right on both counts.
(usual disclaimer: These are my opinions, based on my experience, feel free to ignore them if you don't like them)
Logged
Pages:
1
...
17
18
[
19
]
20
21
...
31
Go Up
« previous
next »
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
The BrillKids Forum
-----------------------------
=> BrillKids Announcements
=> Forum Feedback + Questions
===> Forum Rules + Regulations
===> Forum HOW TOs and FAQs
=> Contests
-----------------------------
EARLY LEARNING
-----------------------------
=> Early Learning - General Discussions
=> Teaching Your Child to Read
=> Teaching Your Child Math
=> Teaching Your Child Music
=> Teaching Your Child - Signing, Speaking, Languages
=> Teaching Your Child Encyclopedic Knowledge
=> Teaching Your Child - Other Topics
=> Parents of Children with Special Needs
=> Homeschooling
=> Prenatal Education
-----------------------------
BEYOND EARLY LEARNING (for older years)
-----------------------------
=> General Discussions - After Early Learning
=> Mathematics
=> Literacy
=> History
=> Languages
=> Music
=> The Sciences
=> Geography and World Studies
-----------------------------
Parents' Lounge
-----------------------------
=> For Guests - No Membership Required
=> Introduce Yourself
=> General Pregnancy
=> General Parenting
=> Coffee Corner - General Chat
=> Forum Games
-----------------------------
Products Marketplace
-----------------------------
=> Product Partners
=> Product Discussions and Reviews
=> Second-Hand Sell + Swap
-----------------------------
BrillKids Software
-----------------------------
=> Little Reader - General Discussion
===> HOW TOs and FAQs
===> Tech Support
=======> Little Reader 2.0 [BETA]
=> Little Math - General Discussion
===> HOW TOs and FAQs
===> Tech Support
=> Little Musician - General Discussion
===> HOW TOs and FAQs
===> Tech Support
=========> Bug Reports
-----------------------------
Downloads + Collaborations Discussions
-----------------------------
=> Little Reader Lesson Downloads
===> English Little Reader Lesson Downloads
===> Foreign Language Little Reader Lesson Downloads
=> Little Math Lesson Downloads
=> General Collaborations
=> Encyclopedic Knowledge Collaborations
=> Free Downloads
===> English Free Downloads
===> Foreign Language Free Downloads
-----------------------------
Local Support Groups
-----------------------------
=> BrillKids Groups in Your Area
===> Australia
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Brazil
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Belgium / Neth. / Lux.
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
=======> Belgium
=======> Luxembourg
=======> Netherlands
===> Canada
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Colombia
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Czech/Slovak Republic
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Egypt
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> France
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Germany
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Hong Kong
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> India
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Indonesia
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Latvia
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Malaysia
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Maldives
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Mexico
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Peru
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Philippines
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Poland
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Singapore
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> South Africa
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Spain
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Thailand
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> Turkey
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> U.S.A.
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
=======> Alabama
=======> Alaska
=======> Arizona
=======> Arkansas
=======> California
=======> Colorado
=======> Connecticut
=======> Delaware
=======> Florida
=======> Georgia
=======> Hawaii
=======> Idaho
=======> Illinois
=======> Indiana
=======> Iowa
=======> Kansas
=======> Kentucky
=======> Louisiana
=======> Maine
=======> Maryland
=======> Massachusetts
=======> Michigan
=======> Minnesota
=======> Mississippi
=======> Missouri
=======> Montana
=======> Nebraska
=======> Nevada
=======> New Hampshire
=======> New Jersey
=======> New Mexico
=======> New York
=======> North Carolina
=======> North Dakota
=======> Ohio
=======> Oklahoma
=======> Oregon
=======> Pennsylvania
=======> Rhode Island
=======> South Carolina
=======> South Dakota
=======> Tennessee
=======> Texas
=======> Utah
=======> Vermont
=======> Virginia
=======> Washington
=======> West Virginia
=======> Wisconsin
=======> Wyoming
===> United Arab Emirates
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
===> United Kingdom
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
=======> England
=======> Wales
=======> Scotland
=======> Northern Ireland
===> Vietnam
=====> General Discussions
=====> Local Meet-Ups
=> Foreign Language Boards Discussions
===> Deutsch
===> Español
===> Italiano
===> Português
===> Русский
===> украї́нська мо́ва
===> Български
===> العربية
===> 简体中文
===> 日本語
===> ภาษาไทย
-----------------------------
BrillKids Foundation
-----------------------------
=> Volunteers
Recent Threads
Nursing Assignment help in Australia
by
newassignmentau
, September 29, 2023, 09:52:09 AM
Modafinil | wakefulness promoting agent
by
jasminfernandes
, August 18, 2023, 05:42:02 AM
Want to know whether Parents, Children prefer to learn a languages online
by
Annasprachzentrum
, August 02, 2023, 08:27:26 PM
Best ways to maintain sexual health
by
Brileydavis
, February 07, 2023, 07:31:40 AM
Kamagra Oral Jelly Buy sildenafil tablet
by
justin robinson
, January 18, 2023, 12:01:12 PM
Vilitra 60 Helps to Make Love More Passionate
by
justin robinson
, January 18, 2023, 11:26:28 AM
Vidalista 20 | Use | Work | Side effects | Precrution
by
justin robinson
, January 18, 2023, 11:17:08 AM
Fildena xxx Drug Made with Sildenafil
by
justin robinson
, January 18, 2023, 11:02:35 AM
Cenforce 200 mg- Your way out of erectile dysfunction
by
justin robinson
, January 18, 2023, 09:45:06 AM
Buy Alprazolam online | alprazolam1mg 2mg | alprazolam 1mg cheap
by
Thepharmacity
, January 04, 2023, 06:12:34 AM
Cheap Dissertation Writing Services
by
Sara Sebastian
, December 20, 2022, 02:04:21 PM
math for preschoolers
by
Kays1s
, December 05, 2022, 02:02:24 AM
Setting Up An Roadrunner Email Account | Roadrunner Email on iPhone |
by
ashokrawat1256
, November 11, 2022, 04:54:21 AM
What Causes ED and How to Cure Erectile Dysfunction Naturally
by
farnanwilliam
, October 22, 2022, 04:12:41 AM
Most Popular Arcade Games For Android Mobile
by
berryjohnson
, February 05, 2020, 12:41:49 PM
document.getElementById('recent_loading').style.display = 'none';document.getElementById('recent_page_box').style.display = '';
Page:
1
/4
Loading...
Recently Added Files
tamil
- months by
BhavaniJothi
, Dec. 05, 2019
More Shapes
- More shapes not originally included in L... by
Kballent
, Oct. 23, 2019
test1
- test by
SSbei
, Sep. 08, 2019
Purple Foods
- I made some lessons with colored food f... by
Kballent
, Aug. 07, 2019
Green Foods
- I made some lessons with colored food f... by
Kballent
, Aug. 07, 2019
Yellow Foods
- I made some lessons with colored food f... by
Kballent
, Aug. 07, 2019
Orange
- I made some lessons with colored food f... by
Kballent
, Aug. 07, 2019
Red Food
- I made some lessons with colored food f... by
Kballent
, Aug. 07, 2019
White Foods
- As part of Color Themes I made some less... by
Kballent
, Aug. 07, 2019
Fruits & veggies mascots
- This is Polish \"must have\" mascots :) ... by
Agnole
, Feb. 24, 2018
Page:
1
/3
Loading...
Stats
Members
Total Members: 214769
Latest:
Meobi
Stats
Total Posts: 110526
Total Topics: 19136
Online Today: 649
Online Ever: 826
(January 22, 2020, 12:09:49 AM)
Users Online
Users: 0
Guests: 380
Total: 380
TinyPortal v1.0.5 beta 1©
Bloc
Loading...
Home
|
File Downloads
|
Search
|
Members
|
BrillBaby
|
BrillKids
|
Terms of Use
|
Privacy Policy
Copyright © 2024 BrillKids Inc. All rights reserved.