首页 诗词 字典 板报 句子 名言 友答 励志 学校 网站地图
当前位置: 首页 > 图书频道 > 进口原版 > Literature >

My Book of Addition

2017-07-08 
This book teaches children to add 3, 4, 5 and bigger single-digit numbers in a step-by-step manner,
商家名称 信用等级 购买信息 订购本书
My Book of Addition 去商家看看
My Book of Addition 去商家看看

My Book of Addition

This book teaches children to add 3, 4, 5 and bigger single-digit numbers in a step-by-step manner, enabling them to gain solid calculation skills without being confused about the concept of decimal places. Building basic addition skills is vital to later understanding the decimal system -- which is in turn the foundation of higher-level arithmetic. This book is designed to prepare children for school-level math.

媒体推荐

Publisher Comment
Kumon workbooks are based on the "Kumon Method", an educational philosophy that aims at unlocking the full learning potential of each individual child. The Kumon Method introduces learning concepts in an incremental, step-by-step approach, allowing children to master new skills easily and without anxiety or frustration. As a result, children gain confidence in their abilities and are motivated to learn on their own.

Over 3.5 million children around the world use the Kumon Method to develop their math and reading skills. Kumon Math and Reading Centers help students become successful, confident and self-motivated learners.

But it?s not just the Kumon Method that makes our workbooks special. It?s also the care and research that goes into the editorial content, design and quality of the books. Our editorial experts have more than two decades of experience in producing books that are both fun and educational. Our designers create illustrations that attract and delight children. And the quality of our books is the best of any workbook on the market, with extra thick paper and the best available print quality. From pedagogy to paper, every one of our workbooks has been carefully crafted with your child?s best interests in mind.

网友对My Book of Addition的评论

I think these books will work very differently with different learning styles. It wasn't made explicit in this book (maybe I missed it) but the kumon method apparently is having a child work for 10 minutes on their own for each of these worksheets and have them stop at the end of the 10 minutes, no matter how little or a lot they've done. I thought this was an interesting approach. Certainly, it leads to less frustration for the student because they have time to work on it but not forced to get through every single problem. It builds the adidtion facts, starting with all the 1s, then the 2's, then the 3's, so on and so forth. the back page of each worksheet is then a mixup fo the problems covered before. It is very tedious and my daughter hated it. But I can see the value in repetition. I believe in allowing children to have fun with math, using manipulatives and playing games, but after a while, there is some good old-fashioned memorization needed (after they understand the concepts). This book can definitely accomplish that purpose but just make sure this isn't killing all of the enthusiasm your child may have. I would use this sparingly, to help reinforce and review but unless your child loves workbooks, this might definitely dampen their desire to do math. I should also add there aren't any colors/pictures, etc to liven up the page (which some kids appreciate, and others just don't care).

Over several months, I had my 4 year old son go through "My Simple Addition" and then some of this book. Although it can be a bit repetitive for him, he has been making progress. Sometimes I would mix a page with something more interesting to him, such as something from the Kumon Number Games 1-70. Since the problems are usually repeated on each page (i.e. there usually is 2 instances of the same problem), once in a while I did catch him copying the answer, so I try to avoid that (i.e. folding the page in half). After he progressed through some of the earlier part of this book, I decided to move off Kumon math books temporarily. Why? I happen to find a math game called TuxMath (yeah, a Linux user here :) ), and I decided to see if I can use it to improve his speed. I have to say, it has been working **great** and he is able to think much faster and has memorized various combinations and is still getting better. Does this mean I will not continue with Kumon? I WILL continue with it, but mix it up with some TuxMath and some pages from this book.

Like everyone says - it is just a page with 20 problems on it so the girls I work with can't really do more than a page a day but I still really enjoy it. The girls are a little under 4 and this book works for them.

I pair it with blocks and ask them to first count out the first number and then add the amount of blocks of the second number, then they count the total. This works pretty well for them.
For example: 8 + 1 = ?
First she counts 8 blocks out, then we add 1 more block and count the total to get 9.

I wish this book had lines because the girls have a lot of trouble making the numbers fit small enough the go next to the equal sign.

I really enjoyed this book. I felt like the author really connected with something genuine inside and effectively shows the reader how to do the same.

This is not a book for people looking for shallow advice that they'll read in CLEO or Cosmopolitan magazine.

It's for those who are genuinely open to finding happiness inside. I really related to what she was saying about waking up feeling empty inside in the morning. I'm in the process of putting her recommendations into practice and I'm already experiencing genuine changes.

I wouldn't say it's perfect, but in my experience it definitely delivers on what it promises.

喜欢My Book of Addition请与您的朋友分享,由于版权原因,读书人网不提供图书下载服务

热点排行