Math games circles




















Press the arrow keys to move the rock. Gain momentum by rolling up and down along the walls and jump over the rocks that are in your way. Play the classic game of strategy. You can challenge the computer, a friend, or join a match against another online player.

On the all-new Fairy Tale island, everyone's happy endings have gone awry. Can you save the day? Level up and earn XP on your way to the world championship.

Challenge other players online in this epic penalty shootout! Outlast your opponents in the ultimate copter arena. Grab upgrades and superpowers, avoid the toxic fog, and be the last one flying! Test your aim in online multiplayer! Watch this video to help you understand how to find the area of circles. Basketball Area of a Circle. Practice calculating the area of circles. Circumference of Circles Resources Circumference Video Video explaining the circumference of a circle Circumference of Circles Games Basketball Circumference Answer the question correct and get more attempts to make a shot!

AAA Math You will be given the radius or the diameter and you have to find the circumference. Matching Circumference Pretty cool graphics on this matching game. This is one of the best ways to teach one to one correspondence for the full guide on what one to one correspondence is and how to teach it, check this out.

If you play for number recognition, then what you do is give out one number flashcard to each child. Get the children to stand up and then they each find a partner. Then you swap your cards, and go and find a new partner. This game could also be played with spots on the cards which the children have to count, or it could be holding shapes for your partner to recognise. This is a good number recognition game, and is good for more skilful children that know lots of numbers, as well as being possible for children who know much fewer numbers.

You simply pass number flashcards around the circle. A child holds the number, says what it is, and then passes it to the person next to them who repeats this process. Have lots of numbers on the go at once. You could give them a toy to hold to focus them. You say the number when you are holding the toy, then pass it on.

This is similar to the last game, and again is a good one for beginning to learn how to count on from a given number. Sit facing a partner. Games like this are good for one child to coach the other and teach them new skills, as there will usually be one child that can count further than the other. To read a full article about how to count on from a given number, then go here.

This is my favourite learning to count backwards activity. First you have to pick your five astronauts to go in the spaceship. Then we all need to get our space helmets on! Get your space boots on! Zip up your space boots! This bit really brings it to life. Using parachutes is one of the best ways of developing cooperation skills and teamwork in the early years, and they are also fantastic for math.

One great game you can try is called Dive! Put lots of numbers underneath the parachute. Then get all the children to hold the parachute. Pick a child to go first. Shout a number, and the child has to dive under the parachute, grab that number and bring it out. To find out my all-time favourite 14 math parachute games, take a look at this article.

Children really love this simple game. I have a character voices dice. It has six different characters on it — a ghost, an alien, a tiger, a princess, a robot and a giant. To make it harder you can roll two dice. Have a character voice and a number dice. Roll both, and then count on from the number you get in the voice that you roll. For example, start counting on from 12 like a robot. Silly but fun and effective! For this I use two dice. One has actions on — e. The other one has numbers.

Using their index finger, get them to draw big numbers in the air to the beat of the music. You could potentially get them to hold streamers or torches to make it even more exciting. Various problems can be Triangles and Squares live together in neighborhoods. Students will explore a game between two players moving a chess Queen from place to place on a square grid.

The Queen may move any number of spaces to the left, any number of spaces downward, and any number of spaces on the downward-left pointing diagonal. Each player takes turns using these moves.

Whoever gets the Queen to the bottom-left square first wins! Skyscrapers come in so many different sizes! Using clues about how many skyscrapers you can see from each side you look at them, can you figure out the layout of the entire city?

Each puzzle is a rectangle made up completely of smaller squares. These squares have numbers inside that represents the length of their sides. Just knowing a few of the squares side lengths, can you figure out all the size of all the squares in the puzzle?

Developed as part of the Math Circles of Inquiry project, this session is a good introduction to the 8th grade or Algebra Math curriculum using inquiry based instruction. Students are asked to use their problem solving skills in order to determine the relationship between the number of Supreme Court justices and handshakes that occur when each pair shakes hands exactly once.

Students will begin exploring with simpler numbers and work up to creating an algebraic expression to represent the function. This lesson allows for multiple representations by using a table, list, circle diagram, matrix and manipulatives. SET is a fun game that can be enjoyed by kids as young as 6 and is challenging even for adults. It is rich in counting problems and is great for getting people to pose problems.

What about a 7 pint jug and 17 pint jug? Or p pint and q pint jugs? The game of Tic-Tac-Toe has roots going back centuries. Grid-style game boards have been found in Ancient Egypt, during the Roman Empire, and in our current age on restaurant placemats. Do you want to know how they did it? This teacher led activity starts with a lottery, explores expected value, and finally ties into finite projective geometries.

A wolf can eat a sheep if it has a direct path to it — or is in same row, column, or diagonal as that sheep. Can you place all your wolves and sheep on an nxn grid so all the sheep are safe? Skip to content. Math Circle Activity Database. Add Activity. Search Search content Clear. Activity Authors Search content. Activity Circles Search content.

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