When a child practices mental maths – maths becomes quicker and simpler!
My girls look at their maths charts (Mini Office A5 Maths) too much, so I made some fun worksheets for practice. These worksheets reinforce adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing with just a few minutes practice every day.
You can download these worksheets ~
Maths Rockets ~ for adding/ subtracting or multiplying numbers on the side to equal the number in the roof (great for bonds)
Maths Butterflies ~ 5 sums for each butterfly, so good for quick reviews
Maths Corners ~ 4 sums for each number, also a quick worksheet
Maths In&Out ~ top row of random numbers “in” to work with a number and operation, and write the answer as “out”
Maths Caterpillars ~ each caterpillar has random numbers or operations, from simple to complex
Maths Amazing Squares ~ brilliant for bonds to 10 ~ all rows add to 10, up, down or sideways!
You can use these sheets as they are or ~
* cut out each section and let them do just one little fun exercise a day
* use a part of the page for pre-lesson reviews
* use the blanks pages to reinforce the numbers or operations you are working on
* focus on 1 operation or number exercise (all x 2 or +2 exercises)
* remedial work with number concepts or operations
With a little regular practice the number combinations or patterns start to “click” ~ which is great for confidence and generates a positive maths attitude!
Let me know what you and your children think!
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I really like the addition wheel would try it with my first graders.Thank you !
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Excellent work.It is very useful for my kids.
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Thank you so much for this excellent worksheets and website, do you maybe have some tips about mirror writing ?
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Dear Nadene,
Thank you for these excellent worksheets.
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I love these worksheets. Just what I was looking for. Thank you so much.
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These are excellent and very helpful!.. Thanks you very much!…
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These look very good. My son will surely enjoy this. Just a question how will this help mental math. What if the child is still counting with his fingers.
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@Mercy, I have a finger-counting child too! I suggest that it is quicker and challenge her to try remember bonds rather than count off a visual chart or her fingers. Try make bonds a memory game and put it to the test with playing cards or a dice or dominoes and they will quickly work answers out without using fingers. Then come back to a mental maths worksheet for extra practice.
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This is just what I was looking for! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!!!
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Thanks, these are brilliant. I just found your blog today! I love it 🙂
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The ideas and patterns are excellent, it will make the young minds think !
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Oh dese worksheets r really nyc….keep up your good work ma’am
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I’ve downloaded all the worksheets. My 5 year old would love these. Thanks a lot!
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me myself i find math very hard but the work sheet is just wow thanks a million for this web page.thanks a lot also cos i am in a year grop whith is very important for me it helped.
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thank you very much for the great maths sheets , it will be big help for me to teach maths to mentally disable adults.
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thnx alot these really helpful thnx alot
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Thankyou very much for such an interesting assignments. My kids really liked them.
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Thank you so much for sharing this. All these will never be forgotten. 🙂
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Thanks so very much for these. My daughters get bored so easily and having something new to spice up the tedious problem of practicing math facts is wonderful!
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I am loving these. They are exactly what we need to start off this year! I do have one question. I know it is asking a lot, but is it possible to get the blank ones (like the last page of the math rockets – where we can fill in our own numbers) in a typeable format? Either way I love these and they are a great boost to our math! Thank you for sharing.
Kori
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Lori, thanks, and I’ll try upload a blank MS Word template or if that fails, I’ll email it to you!
Blessings, Nadene
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Wow! These are wonderful! I saw your post to the skeleton closet on HSS and clicked on your blog link! Now I am doubly thankful you added stuff to the skeleton closet! Thanks for sharing- I have been running short on ideas to help my math-challenged dd6 🙂
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These are brilliant. Thank you so much for sharing.
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Hi Denise, popped over to your blog – wonderful treasure trove of sites, games and ideas! Thanks for all you share!
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Wow! Thanks so much for sharing these!
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These look amazing. I am impressed with your creativity. Thanks for sharing!
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This is GREAT! Math frustrates my daughter (for whom reading comes SO easy). I prepared a notebook with exercises ranging in complexity for her to work on at her leisure. These will definitely be included and I am subscribing to your blog. Thanks again.
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Thank you SO MUCH!!! I just print them all and will try them with my kiddos tomorrow!
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I love your Math worksheets, I just print them all and will work with my kiddos, thank you SO MUCH!!
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These are gorgeous – thanks so much for sharing all your hard work 🙂
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Nadene, thanks so much for all you share in your blog.. you ideas are such a blessing for us. Your math pages looks great, I will try them!
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Thanks again!
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Dear Nadene, Hi ~ Was downloading and reading the work sheets and your maths charts (mini office A5 maths), and just ran across the shapes page. I don’t mean to be picky, but you’ve named the five sided shape a “pentagram” rather than a “pentagon” and there really is a difference. What you have on the chart is a “pentagon” ~ a pentagram is the five sided star. Here are the links to the different definitions: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentagon and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentagram . I just thought you might want to make a correction to your charts. 🙂 In His Grace, Kay
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Oops! Type-o! Thanks! I’ll edit it!
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Thanks ~ I love these and am grateful that now I don’t have to come up with all this on my own! Am sure my youngest, who struggles so with math, will be helped by using these.
In His Grace, Kay
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Just printed them off and going to try them with the kids. Always looking for math worksheets that might be more fun than just doing straight problems.
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