The world often breaks down into numbers and regular patterns that form predictable cycles. And the sooner children can inherently grasp these patterns, the more confident and comfortable they will be with the world of math.
That's the discerning approach of University at Buffalo Graduate School of Education professor Ming Ming Chiu, and it's based on decades of teaching teachers and watching how students learn. Known for helping parents find teachable math moments, especially at the dinner table and on living room sofa, Ming has devised new ways to make young kids comfortable with the ways of math.
View a video of Ming demonstrating his easy-to-follow and fun "Brain Games" for parents and children. His games are designed to help young, pre-kindergarten children understand concepts that give mathematical order to the chaos around them.
"Children with stronger math skills can recognize more patterns in the world's rapid creation of new information, which grew by a factor of nine during 2006-11," says Ming. "By understanding these patterns, children will not only better compete for the best jobs as adults, but they also will be better equipped to help solve such major problems as global warming and energy crises.
"The U.S. may be the richest country in the world, but the scores of 15-year-olds on international mathematics tests are below average, behind 30 countries," he says.
Ming's Brain Games are simple but effective educational exercises that parents can do with their children at home. These games, some of which he demonstrates in the video, include:
Ming encourages parents, teachers, caretakers, friends — and anyone else who wants to help young people learn math — to devise their own fun Brain Games. He has only four simple rules for doing so:
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