Welcome to the Math Minds Blog
The purpose of this blog is to further illustrate and elaborate on the RaPID model. This is the first of many to come.
The purpose of this blog is to further illustrate and elaborate on the RaPID model. This is the first of many to come.
Some games may support the learning of mathematics in one way or another. It is important, however, to identify the…
In this post, we highlight how a game might be adapted so that it requires learners to make the particular distinction we want them to make. We also highlight the importance of first presenting this distinction to them. The original game is a memory game; the adapted game has to do with distinguishing left from right.
If you’d like to know more about Math Minds and its evolution, you may wish to explore some of our…
Lost Cities is a game that offers opportunities for meaningful practice at varying levels of expertise—provided strategies are taught in meaningful ways. In particular, it offers a motivating context for practicing skip counting, making tens, and flexible re-grouping for adding two and three-digit numbers.
Sleeping Queens can offer meaningful practice with regrouping to add, recognizing equality, and dividing by two and three. It can be played in a way that makes it accessible for children in K-3 or challenging for children in Grades 4-6 (and beyond). It can also be adapted for play with a traditional deck of cards.
Why do we use so many examples from JUMP Math in our course? Martina explains...