Primary Teachers Resources

Jan 30, 2012

primary teachers resources

How Can I Help My Pupils Engage With Maths?

Primary Teaching Resources
for Maths will bring alive what can be a dry subject. A solid understanding of maths is an important tool for boys and girls to learn, and the faster they get a good understanding of it the better. Time was teachers would spend days devising and creating resources with which to make maths an interesting visual experience. These days, however, there are a lot of Primary Teaching Resources on the market which engage with young children on a strong visual level.

Primary school children may not yet have strong reading or numerical schools (that, after all, is why they are primary school children), but their visual skills are as strong as any. That’s why the best
primary teaching resources
need to offer children a visual key for solving number problems. Easily recognisable images children can relate to are used to teach numeracy in a fun manner.

Money is taught by means of cards showing sweets; each sweet is an individual unit, boxes of sweets represent tens and jars of sweets represent hundreds. It’s a whole lot less dry than dealing with pence pounds. The majority of young children of primary school age will not have handled cash, but they are only too familiar with counting out and eying up sweets. These sweet cards were the first, but currently there are many different Place Value card sets, using diverse enjoyable metaphors to teach practical mathematical skills.

Fractions are explained through commonly divisible items including pizzas, pies, puddings and tarts. Many other sets enable the same topics to be taught but with slightly different emphasis, to ensure that children can separate and recognise the various functions involved in more difficult sums (e.g. facts to 10 can be taught in assorted ways with Digit Pop Ups, Busy Boats, Zillions, Wish Fish and Lady Bugs). The Monster Number Line goes further, teaching numbers as high as 30, 50 or even 100 depending on the ability and aptitude of the child.

Many teachers find it particularly difficult to get boys to engage in the classroom. Number lines and missing numbers are taught with X-Planes. Footie Facts frames those same digits and bonds to 10 or doubles in a manner that many young boys will find engaging and interesting.

The Multiplication Rainbow has been a particular success. It is essentially a redesigned multiplication table. Rather than having the digits in strict lines and columns, they are arranged along the cures and colours of a rainbow. Like all the products here mentioned, the design helps make learning that little bit less formal and intimidating, while the bright, regimented colours can act as a guide and reminder for children when trying to recall their times tables.

Both adults and children do some of their best learning when they don’t even realise they ARE learning. Playground Pictures mean the learning experience can continue een during back times. External PVC wall pictures display important primary Maths information in a bold and colourful manner. Available pictures include bees, stars and flowers. All can be easily fixed to walls or fences with glue, screws or nails.

Most of all, these items will make Maths fun. Ideas that might seem all to easy to adults demand a lots of memorisation from children. Using entertaining, relatable concepts makes that job much simpler for them.


Share with others

No Responses so far | Have Your Say!

Leave a Feedback

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Subscribe to our Newsletter