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.
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 first roll a number cube. This number will then let students know how many of the 10 animals need to be eliminated/subtracted. They will cross that many off. They will then create a number sentence to mathematically explain how they end up with fewer animals.
In this lab, students will take piles of sand and determine what the sand's angle of repose is. Students will compare 4 trials and see at how many degrees slope will the sand be able to handle before it has a landslide. There is math involved in this process. Students will then answer some questions based on their observations.
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In this 1st-grade math worksheet, students will determine which the whole number is missing from a number sentence. First-grade students will get an opportunity to demonstrate how whole numbers relate to each other in an equation. These numbers range from 1-20 and the math worksheet in a Valentine style, both font, and imagery. There are 8 number sentence questions.