Introduction

Most parents will agree that it is a wonderful experience to
cuddle up with their child and a good book. Few people will say
that about flash cards or pages of math problems. For that
reason, we have prepared this book to offer some math
activities that are meaningful as well as fun. You might want to
try doing some of them to help your child explore relationships,
solve problems, and see math in a positive light. These
activities use materials that are easy to find. They have been
planned so you and your child might see that math is not just
work we do at school but, rather, a part of life.

It is important for home and school to join hands. By fostering a
positive attitude about math at home, we can help our children
learn math at school.

It's Everywhere! It's Everywhere!
Math is everywhere and yet, we may not recognize it because it
doesn't look like the math we did in school. math in the world
around us sometimes seems invisible. But math is present in our
world all the time -- in the workplace, in our homes, and in life
in general.

You may be asking yourself, "How is math everywhere in my life?
I'm not an engineer or an accountant or a computer expert!" math
is in your life from the time you wake until the time you go to
sleep. You are using math each time you set your alarm, buy
groceries, mix baby food, keep score or time at an athletic
event, wallpaper a room, decide what type of shoe to buy, or wrap
a present. Have you ever asked yourself, "Did I get the correct
change?" or "Do I have enough petrol to drive 20 miles?" or "Do I
have enough juice to fill all my children's flasks for lunch?" or
"Do I have enough bread for the week?" math is all this and
much, much more.

How Do You Feel About math?

How do you feel about math? Your feelings will have an impact
on how your children think about math and themselves as
mathematicians. Take a few minutes to answer these questions:
* Did you like math in school?
* Do you think anyone can learn math?
* Do you think of math as useful in everyday life?
* Do you believe that most jobs today require math skills?
If you answer "yes" to most of these questions, then you are
probably encouraging your child to think mathematically. This
book contains some ideas that will help reinforce these positive
attitudes about math.

You Can Do It!


If you feel uncomfortable about math, here are some ideas to
think about.
math is a very important skill, one which we will all need for
the future in our technological world. It is important for you to
encourage your children to think of themselves as mathematicians
who can reason and solve problems.
math is a subject for all people. math is not a subject that
men can do better than women. Males and females have equally
strong potential in math.
People in the fine arts also need math. They need math not
only to survive in the world, but each of their areas of
specialty requires an in-depth understanding of some math, from
something as obvious as the size of a canvas, to the beats in
music, to the number of seats in an audience, to computer-
generated artwork.
Calculators and computers require us to be equally strong in
math. Their presence does not mean there is less need for
knowing math. Calculators demand that people have strong mental
math skills -- that they can do math in their heads. A
calculator is only as accurate as the person putting in the
numbers. It can compute; it cannot think! Therefore, we must be
the thinkers. We must know what answers are reasonable and what
answers are outrageously large or small.
Positive attitudes about math are important for our country.
People are quick to admit that "I am not good at math." We need
to change this attitude, because mathematicians are a key to our
future.
The workplace is rapidly changing. No longer do people need only
the computational skills they once needed in the 1940s. Now
workers need to be able to estimate, to communicate
mathematically, and to reason within a mathematical context.
Because our world is so technologically oriented, employees need
to have quick reasoning and problem-solving skills and the
capability to solve problems together. The work force will need
to be confident in math.

Build Your Self-Confidence!
To be mathematically confident means to realise the importance of
mathematics and feel capable of learning to
* Use mathematics with ease;
* Solve problems and work with others to do so;
* Demonstrate strong reasoning ability;,
* See more than one way to approach a problem;
* Apply mathematical ideas to other situations; and
* Use technology.