Multiplication.com has free multiplication worksheets available to download, and each has a secret word message with a secret alphabet message key that goes with Martin Luther King Day, or Civil Rights Day.
Practice your tens and ones place value with your students using this "Loopy" game. Cut out the cards and distribute them to your students. Each card should ends with "Who am I." If done right all of your students would have a chance and answering a question and playing the game.
Generate equivalent expressions using two additive properties. This video focuses on using the associative and commutative properties of addition to combine like terms, simplify expressions, and create equivalent expressions. Change the sign to multiplication and you can use this for the properties of multiplication as well.
Multiplication.com has some really good self-correcting quizzes for math facts. It allows students to take quizzes with visual hints or without them. Students can practice math fact fluency for specific math facts that they might be struggling with. When a student is finished it can even print out an image of how well they did.
This is a worksheet that contains three addition problems tied to an Easter theme. Students count the objects and then place the answer into the big Easter Egg.
Students will order the 5 numbers least to greatest. There are 7 sets of numbers to order. There is also a section at the bottom that the student can write his/her time in if you would like to time their fluency. The numbers range is 1-9.
In this worksheet students will order 7 sets of 4 numbers from least to greatest; numbers 1-20. There is space for adding a student's time if you want to turn this into a speed fluency check.