When you need to change up your activity routine, try these fun and engaging math activities! These won’t just keep them engaged but also help with their skills.
Work on a math puzzle or play a math game
- Memory
- BlackJack
- Monopoly
- Tangrams
- Chutes and Ladders
- Mastermind
- Make up games with cards or dice
- Dominoes
- Rummy
- Yahtzee
- Pig
Read a story with math in it or math figures
based on favorites by teachers and parents!
- Zero by Kathryn Otoshi
- The Math Curse
- The Fly on the Ceiling: A Math Myth
- Blockhead: the life of Fibonacci
- On a Beam of Light: A Story of Albert Einstein
- The Grapes Of Math
- The Monster Who Did My Math
- Anno’s Mysterious Multiplying Jar
- All of the ones by Stuart J Murphy
- The Boy Who Loved Math: The Improbable Life of Paul Erdos
- Sir Cumference Book Series Complete Set Pack ( Books 1- 10 )
- Count on Frank
- The Girl with a Mind for Math
- Counting on Katherine: How Katherine Johnson Saved Apollo 13
- The Phantom Tollbooth
- Chasing Vermeer
Solve a real-world math problem (money, counting, comparisons, calculations)
- Go shopping – comparisons, measurement
- Build something – measurement
- Design a product – shapes, material costs, estimation
- Cooking – measurements, fractions
- Gardening – lots of opportunities to talk about the area, perimeter, multiplication, and factors
- Create a “store” and have your student work out the budget or sales tax
Make up funny rhymes or songs to help memorize facts, or find some math songs and learn them.
- Counting songs
- Multiplication songs
- Quadrilateral songs
- Pi songs
- Quadratic equation 🙂
Work on a math project or investigation.
- Learn about pi (and the history of pi)
- Learn about math history
- Play with origami
- Create a tessellation
- Create a drawing with geometric shapes
- Draw a fractal
Interact with online games and manipulatives
- Use Desmos to draw and graph different types of lines
- Use Geogebra to interact with angles and relationships
- “Drive” race cars and play against other students in Math Playground
Have your student make a math poster or presentation of what they have learned.
- Let your student have fun with colors, magazines, poster paper, cuttings, photos
- Have your child make a Powerpoint presentation or a Prezi