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Books You Can Count On
Linking Mathematics and Literature

Margaret Clyne, Victoria, Australia Schools, Rachel Griffiths, Victoria, Australia Schools

ISBN 978-0-435-08322-9 / 0-435-08322-8 / 1991 / 112pp / Paperback
Imprint: Heinemann
Availability: In Stock

Grade Level: K-2

List Price: $19.00
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Description
    A valuable teaching resource for elementary school teachers who would like to integrate mathematics and literature in their classrooms.
    —The Story Bag Newsletter

One difficult aspect of teaching mathematics in the early grades is tying the subject to other areas of the curriculum, particularly the central core language arts. Mathematics need not—indeed it should not—stand alone, nor must it be allied only to science.

In Books You Can Count On, teachers can explore opportunities for relating math to reading. This teaching resource for primary schools provides a wide range of ideas for teaching mathematics through literature and can be used with any math program. The book includes: a mathematical overview, background information, notes on classroom organization, assessment, and evaluation, and lesson outlines based on forty different stories and poems. Each activity includes a synopsis, preparation for teaching, mathematical aims, evaluation notes, and suggestions for extension; mathematical themes such as size, classification, and spatial relations; and a list of further references.

Table of Contents

    Contents:
    1.
    Why Mathematics and Literature?
    2. Benefits of Using Literature in Mathematics
    3. Developing Mathematical Thinking Through Literature
    4. Activities Based on Individual Books: Ten Nine Eight; The Very Hungry Caterpillar; Teddybears Go Shopping; When We Went to the Park; 1 Hunter; A Lost Button/Buttons;Goldilocks and the Three Bears; A Lion in the Night; A Bag Full of Pups; Changes, Changes; The Doorbell Rang; Happy Birthday Sam; When the King Rides By; Grandma Goes Shopping; The Shopping Basket; The Very Busy Spider; Phoebe and the Hot Water Bottles; Ten Apples Up on Top; Alexander, Who Used to Be Rich Last Sunday; Dad's Diet; The Hilton Hen House; A Day on the Avenue; A Pet for Mrs. Arbuckle; Something Absolutely Enormous; The Twelve Days of Christmas; All in a Day; Anno's Mysterious Multiplying Jar; Round Trip; King Kaid of India; Mr. Archimedes' Bath; Who Sank the Boat?; Anno's Counting Book; Sizes
    5. Activities Based on Rhymes and Poems: Hands/Measuring; Autumn and Apples; A Dreadful Thought/A Spider's Bedsocks; Mice; Band-Aids; Age; The Song of the Shapes
    6. Themes
    7. Counting Books
    8. Annotated Booklist of Other Mathematical Topics
    9. Classroom Organization and Other Issues
    10.
    Assessment and Evaluation

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