Math Sites

Math Activities
A comprehensive collection of math topics

A+ Math (Grades 2-5)
A+ Math offers computation skills games, flash cards, and the "Homework Helper": an interactive calculator with problems formatted much as they are on standard worksheets, allowing students to check their own work.

AAA Math
This site contains hundreds of pages of basic math skills and interactive practice on every page. Sorted by topic or by grade level.

A Maths Dictionary for Kids
A Maths Dictionary for Kids is a colourful Website that defines 400 common mathematical terms in simple language. The terms are organized alphabetically, and an activity or visual example accompanies each definition. For example, for the term "analog clock," students can practice figuring out the time on a clock graphic.

Coolmath.com
This interactive math Website describes itself as an "amusement park of math" and is divided into sections for parents, teachers, kids aged 3 to 12, and kids "aged 13 to 100." The site features activities, games, and lessons in a variety of Math areas such as fractals, algebra, and geometry.

The Educator's Reference Desk (Grades K-12)
This site provides access to a resource collection, lesson plans and a question archive.

Flashcards for Kids (Grades K-12)
Online practice with basic math skills. Set the level of difficulty and type of math operation desired.

Fun Brain's Math Games (Grades 1-12)
Designed in the "computation exercise should be fun" school, these games offers math practice at different levels. Attractive graphics and a clear interface make this site worth putting on your list for computation practice.

Geometry
Includes links to 300 math sites on the Internet.

Helping Your Child Learn Math (Grades K-8)
Math Activities for 5-13 year olds are the focus of this web site hosted by the U.S. Department of Education. Topics include things that kids can do at home, at the grocery store, or in transit. Everything is designed with kids and parents in mind, but could be adapted for classroom use. Note that some of the accompanying materials at this site are geared towards parents as participants in their child's math education experiences. These ideas could be useful discussion starters at parent/teacher meetings.

Kathy Schrock's Guide for Educators (Grades K-12)
This educator has assembled an amazing resource to guide you more quickly to useful math resources.

Kids' Place Brain Teasers
Logic puzzles are great fun! This resource from Houghton-Mifflin's Education Place offers weekly logic puzzles at three different levels: Grades 3-4, Grades 5-6, and Grades 7-8. Click the "Archive" button to pick from puzzles from the last three weeks.

Math-abunbdance (Grade 9-12)
This site offers tutorials on topics from pre-Algebra through Calculus. Each topic includes well-written definitions, sample problems, and an interactive quiz. A nice feature is that the site explains the process for answering each missed problem on a quiz.

Math Worksheets
A page of links to sites that feature math worksheets and worksheet makers.

The Math Forum
You can search this large website by keyword, math topic, resource topic, or education level.

Mr. Hoffman's Home Page (Grade 9-12)
This site has links to student reference material, quizzes and exams (with answer keys), interactive vocabulary quizzes. Material based on Saskatchewan Provincial Curriculum and includes Math 9, Math 10, Math 20 , Math A30, Math B30, Math C30 and Calculus 30.

PBS Mathline (Grades K-12)
A very organized site, each lesson includes video clips from real classrooms where the lesson was taught! Search by grade level and topic.

Quia - Top 20 Math Activities
Interactive activities created by other teachers. Create your own!

Webmath (Grades 3-12)
This math site is set up to provide computerized step-by-set tutorials on most individual problems in almost any math topic. While not designed as a tutorial on whole topics, the interactive power of its sophisticated math problem-solving program will captivate students. The goal of the creators of this site is "to give a student immediate help over the Internet with the particular math problem they are on." Consider giving students a set of exercises to type into the appropriate section of Webmath and then learn how to solve them. Then assess what students have learned with another set to do on their own.