Are There Fun Math Games Parents Can Play With a Struggling Math Student?

The problem is there are too many fun math games available for parents to play with their struggling math student. Parents have been known to go "hogwild" buying tons of books and downloading every math game site known to man. It is important for parents to weed through all the options out there by coordinating with the teacher and using their advice on Internet sites and finding materials that are designed to reinforce all the while not putting too much pressure on the struggling math student. Learn problem solving with Vedic math

Parents need to take the first and most important step in their desire to help their struggling math student improve their skills by using fun math games at home. Keep the pressure off! Parental pressure to improve and get better often just adds to the problem. Make sure you understand your child's learning style and use the schools experience with struggling math students to guide you. Often, time is what is needed, eventually it all comes together. This is why math games targeted for specific skills, can be useful while taking the pressure off as well.

Coordinating with the teacher on which skill and the proper sequence the student needs is another important piece the parent must keep in mind. Each math skill has other sub skills that must be mastered for it to make sense. If the student is having trouble with fractions, the teacher can tell you which of the sub skills the struggling student need reinforced. Before choosing which activities you use at home, you really need to know the specific skill you want to reinforce or review. Play to Learn Math Program 

It is easy for a concerned parent to jump to the Internet, go on forums and find a boatload of suggestions for fun math games on the Internet. Forums designed for homeschooling would be the most helpful resource as they have already done much of the screening. When asking for advice in a forum, be specific for which skill you want to reinforce. Some sites have games that work well for one but for another are not so good. It is always wise to ask the teacher what they recommend as there are many sites that the student can do at home and the teacher can log in and follow the progress, and even assign which games to play.

It is important to remember many of the best fun math games are not online but ones where you use pencil and paper or a game board interacting with a human body, not a computer screen. Having a supply of good, well researched, games to use at home, that the teacher has suggested or approves helps create that stress free environment needed to reinforce skills and make math fun. Whether you go to a local teacher store looking for materials or you use a digital downloadable product you will be able to enjoy yourself with your child knowing you are targeting the most appropriate skills.

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