Home learning

Home Learning

Here are some ideas for home learning. We strongly encourage you to read with your child every night and look at their ring words. 

Reading:

- Reading is our main focus and this needs to be recorded in their yellow reading log book in their book bag. 
- Look out for sight words of the week and letters of the week 
- Practice sounding out the letters/words
- Using the pictures to help 
- Re-reading the text 
- Ask them questions about the book

Poem:

- Enjoy reading your poem together 
- Find our letters/sounds/words of the week 
- Try use a loud, clear voice to practice reading to an audience 

Ring words:

- Practice saying your ring words
- Write them in your home learning book
- Find them around the home, shops, magazine, newspapers, books etc. 
- Make them in the sand, with play dough or in flour. 
- Make the learning fun and hands on for the kids

Maths:

- Focus on numbers 1-100
- Use the hundreds board to identify numbers 
- Know numbers before and after 
- Ordering numbers eg. 45, 46, 47, 48
- Skip count 
- Read, write and say the numbers 
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Ideas for using your hundreds board at home

ADDITION AND SUBTRACTION


100chart(1) Use the hundred chart as a number line to do addition and subtraction beyond what your child normally can handle. Take turns making up problems for each other to solve. Develop mental math skills by showing how to add or subtract the tens first (counting up or down) then the ones (counting left or right.)
(2) Look for addition and subtraction patterns. 3+9=? Now go to 23+9, 33+9, 63+9. What do you notice? What do 15-7, 25-7, 45-7, etc. have in common? Find other patterns.
(3) Count by whatever number you want, but start at an unusual place. Count by 5, starting at 18. Or count by 2, but start with 37. Or for a tougher challenge, practice your mental subtraction skills: count down by the number of your choice.
(4) Try some of these counting ideas with charts that start and end at other numbers.HelpingWithMath.com lets you create printable charts that start at whatever number you specify and count by whatever interval you like. You could make an even numbers chart, or a multiples of 3 chart, or . . . the possibilities are endless!
(5) How many numbers are there from 11 to 25? Are you sure? What does it mean to count from one number to another? When you count, do you include the first number, or the last one, or both, or neither? Talk about inclusive and exclusive counting, and then make up counting puzzles for each other.

NUMBER AND PATTERN ACTIVITIES

(6) Make picture puzzles: You give the clues — either a description of a number (“It’s two less than 26″) or an equation that equals that number — and your student colour in the appropriate square. Repeat to make a design (samples here, or try this cross-stitch heart). Now, let your student make up a puzzle for you to colour.
.pieces of 100

(7) From Mathwire: Cut up a hundred board into irregular pieces to make a puzzle. For more of a challenge, cut a blank chart into puzzle pieces, writing in one or two numbers per piece. Can your student fill in the rest of the numbers? [Or use this printable puzzle worksheet. If you press the “Print” button, they will ask you for a member password (which costs money), but if you just use your browser’s print function, the page should print just fine. Refresh your screen to get a new set of numbers.]
(8) Play “Arrow Games”: Starting at the number given, each arrow means to move one square in the direction shown. What number is “45 ↑ → ↑”? How would you use arrows to say, “Start and 27 and move to 59″? Make up your own arrow code for someone to follow. Mathwire has a pdf version of this activity.

HUNDRED CHART GAMES Euclid game

(9) Play “Race to 100.″ Take turns rolling one or two dice and moving that many spaces on the hundreds chart. If you correctly predict your landing place before you move (without counting squares!), then you can go one extra space as a bonus. The first person to reach or pass 100 wins the game
(10) Play a number bonds game. Take turns pointing to any number. The other player has to say how many more it takes to make 100.
(11) Play Five-in-a-Row, on a printed hundred chart. Use a wide-tip marker to make Xs and Os, or use pennies and nickels to mark the squares. On each turn, the player must make up a calculation that equals the number in the square they want to mark.

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