Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Math Printables

Daily Math


I made these for my kids to supplement their math. We have used them for several years. They really helped them learn about dates and time, along with extra facts practice everyday. The grade levels are really subjective and they were designed to fill specific needs each child had at that point. I worked with the kids on each page, and they really aren't made to be completely independent.

Kindergarten/1st Grade

Basic Instructions: Pick a number. Give the child the date, the daily number, a time, and a temperature. I wrote it all on our dry erase board. I didn't always use the time and temperature as it was similar day after day. 


Kindergarten/1st Grade

Basic Instructions: Pick a number. Give the child the date, and the daily number. I sometimes wrote out the larger additions and subtractions so they could see them stacked up. Write out the number so they can spell it as well. 


1st/ 2nd Grade

Basic Instructions: Pick a number. Give the child the date, the daily number, a time, and a temperature. We practiced counting by numbers we had already learned using rhythms or tunes. The line to the left of the Daily Number box is for writing the number out. For the daily problem I gave them an addition fact (I.E. 4+5) and they wrote out the whole fact family. (4+5, 5+4, 9-4, 9-5) The number line was used to show one of the four facts. They filled in the calendar, just writing the month and finding the correct box for that day's date and writing it. They didn't fill in the whole calendar each day. 



2nd/ 3rd Grade 

Basic Instructions: Give the child the date, the daily number, a time, and a temperature. The timeline can be filled in by the child using variations (hundreds, tens, etc.) or by the teacher leaving blanks for the child to fill in or numbers to find. The daily problem is the same as the addition/subtraction version. It is used for one fact family (I.E. 3x4, 4x3, 12/3, 12/4). The rounding is done with the daily number which should be large by now (in the hundreds or thousands). They round the number to the nearest ten and hundred, and then add the two. The month lines were used to learn the order of the months. They filled in three at a time until they memorized the year. The word balloon is there because my daughter asked for something to draw a picture in. ;) The clocks were done to find elapsed time. Sometimes I filled in both clocks, sometimes one clock and the "later" line. I wrote digital time or filled in the hands. Lots of variations. 




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Thank you for your understanding! 




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