Thinking about Everyday Math alternatives....

XYSRUS

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Apr 2, 2006
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Can anyone suggest a Saxon math book for K-3. There are so many to choose from. I am going to supplement my kids EM with what I know and make sure they have the basics down. My 2 oldest are fine b/c they missed when our district started this junk. I can already see the 8yo being not so confident/strong in his math reasoning. Thanks!
 
Our kids used Saxon math in school and I LOVE this program. I don't have any idea which "book" they used but I LOVE this program. EDM is a joke.
 
Our district makes us teach that EM junk. I am constantly supplementing because the program fails miserably at getting them to know the basics.
 
EM-2 trains were heading toward the station one traveling at 50mph one traveling at 40 mph. Why were they going to the station :lmao:?
 

EM-2 trains were heading toward the station one traveling at 50mph one traveling at 40 mph. Why were they going to the station :lmao:?

:rotfl::rotfl::rotfl:

My DD was in EM from 4th grade through 7th grade. The program in Middle School becomes "Connected Mathematics". The district...keeps wondering why the math scores keep dropping...HMMM - I wonder if there is a math problem there :)

Personally - I was SO glad DD moved into a more advanced math track in 8th grade which is NOT EM/CM. WooHoo!
 
We use the Singapore Math program and love it :)
 
Our district makes us teach that EM junk. I am constantly supplementing because the program fails miserably at getting them to know the basics.

I taught first grade for the past 4 years in NYC. We used EDM there; I also had to supplement the program with my own stuff just to cover the state standards to a proficient level.

EM-2 trains were heading toward the station one traveling at 50mph one traveling at 40 mph. Why were they going to the station :lmao:?

:lmao::rotfl2::rotfl:

OP - I would suggest googling or asking your child's teacher for a copy of your state's math standards. They could be called "standards", "benchmarks", "performance indicators", "Grade level expectations", or something else that I haven't heard of yet. :lmao: Basically, they are the skills that your child needs to know by the end of that grade in order to be successful in the following grades.

If you can't find them for your state, the New York and Louisiana state math standards are clear and specific, so look for those. They should be similar to your state's. (The LA and NY ones are almost the same, word for word in grade 1).

Once you have those, you can look up activities online or just come up with your own ideas (such flash cards for computation, counting a handful of coins/bills &/or making change, make up your own math stories to solve) likely for far cheaper than buying a full program.

There is also a series of books that are good at explaining different math concepts. I personally have not used them much, but I have friends that rave about them. Each book is for different grade levels:
Math to Learn (gr 1-2)
Math to Know (gr 3-4)
Math at Hand (gr 5-6)
Math on Call (gr 6-8)
Algebra to Go (gr 8-12)
Geometry to Go (gr 8-12)
Great Source is the name of the company. I've seen them at Barnes and Noble before.

Good luck!
 
We teach Everyday Math at our school. We just adopted it for another round. From what we had to choose from, it was the best. I really enjoy teaching it although I don't like how some of the components are taught and I do teach them in a different way. I have also taught Saxon(which had many gaps in it) and many others. Saxon never really seemed to take the concepts quite far enough. There isn't anything out there that you don't have to supplement. Nothing will cover everything in your standards fully. They may say they do, but there are always gaps. We supplement with a program called Fantastic Five. It presents five different concepts each day and builds on them daily. I also use Math 4 Today in my class. Not all teachers in my school use it because of time constraints but it is also good to fill in the gaps. Neither of these programs are meant to be a base program. They are both designed to be a supplement.
 












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