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Real World Math which uses Google Earth in the Math Curriculum provides lessons, activities, and new ideas that bring math instruction into this millennium. Intended for grades 5 and up, this material offers an Instructional Technology approach to learning.
People regularly talk about millions of miles, billions of bytes, or trillions of dollars, yet it's still hard to grasp just how much a "billion" really is. The MegaPenny Project aims to help by taking one small everyday item, the U.S. penny, and building on that to answer the question: "What would a billion (or a trillion) pennies look like?"
The National Math Trail - "an opportunity for K-12 teachers and students to discover and share the math that exists in their own environments. Students explore their communities and create one or more math problems that relate to what they find. Teachers
Math sites and downloads for use with interactive whiteboards
It is organized by divisions. Divisions 1 and 2 are complete. Division 3 is
being developed. Most weeks this division is updated. This resource is called a
Math Glossary, but in Jim's opinion it is a Math Bonanza.
this site, well-known for its offering of interactive math activities, has created a toolkit page with links to over 50 explorers, games, and quizzes in which students can tailor their activity by problem type, level, and time to solve. In addition, these
Jim is an accomplished secondary math teacher here in Edmonton and he has a plethora of information and activities on his webpages. Be sure you have some time when you stop by - you'll be amazed at all of the resources!
This is a video library of math TV shows produced at Loyola University in Chicago. I used to watch this show with my students two schools ago, and I think it's great that the materials are now archived online.
The National Math Trail - "an opportunity for K-12 teachers and students to discover and share the math that exists in their own environments. Students explore their communities and create one or more math problems that relate to what they find. Teachers submit the problems to the National Math Trail site, along with photos, drawings, sound recordings, videos--whatever can be adapted to the Internet.
- Frances DiDavide on 2008-04-28