The instructor’s guide is the core of the program, with conversational and hands-on activities and games that teach the key skills and concepts.Kindergarten Math with Confidence is a complete kindergarten math program with two volumes: an instructor’s guide and a student workbook. Wishing you all the best in your teaching! Happy Kindergarten Math! If you have any more questions, just add a comment below and I’ll make sure to respond. I hope that having all this info will help you feel well-informed and confident as you decide what program is best for your child. Fun (but optional) picture book recommendations and real-life extension activities to help your child enjoy and appreciate mathīelow, you’ll find lots more info: a video description of the program, answers to common questions, samples, and pilot testers’ experiences with the program.Checkpoints at the end of each unit that help you decide whether to spend more time on the current unit or move on to the next one.Friendly, approachable notes and tips that help you grow as a teacher.Open-and-go format so you can pick up the book and start teaching.Complete coverage of all kindergarten math topics ( writing numbers, counting to 100, beginning addition and subtraction, shapes, measurement, time, money, and more).Lots of games, pretend activities, and movement.My hope is that the program will not only help your child learn math with confidence, but also empower you to teach math with confidence! I’ve taken everything I’ve learned from my years of answering parents’ homeschool math questions and used it to make Kindergarten Math with Confidence as parent-friendly as possible. Math may have not been your best subject in school, and the thought of teaching it may even make you feel a little anxious.īut don’t worry: If you can add 3 plus 5 and count to 100, you know everything you need to know to teach kindergarten math! And with my new kindergarten homeschool math program, I’m here to help you every step of the way. If you’re like most parents, you’ve probably never taught math before. That's the easy part.Everything you need to know about Kindergarten Math with Confidence, my new homeschool math program! Samples, answers to frequently asked questions, a video, and more, to help you decide whether the program is a good fit for your family. Doesn't really matter if they can only sound it out. Well, comprehension is the point, no? Whatever level a child can understand is their reading level. I think it was a result of being pushed to decipher letters. Some of those issues seem easier to grasp taking a step down in level.)Īs a K and first grade teacher, I observed that the really early readers often struggled with comprehension. (how to decipher totally unfamiliar words they'll encounter in more complex material, especially technical nonfiction, reading slightly simpler books to work on comprehension, plot, character, etc. Some advanced readers seem to be aided by reading below their level to work on some things. Many bright kids who become academically successful might not be the most advanced reader in the first couple of years. Some kids struggle more with comprehension, she might not be typical, but in any of the early years classes there is a wide span of reading level. Now in middle school she reading fluently and her comprehension is as good or better than the early reading peers. My child was not reading at all, 2 of her friends were reading full novels more typical for 4th/5th/6th grade.
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