June 11th, 2023
Hi there, everyone,
How’s it going? There are only 2 days left before the exam session, and I’m so happy; I think I’m growing tired of seeing the same students, and I’m pretty sure the students are tired of seeing my face too, haha. Today’s post will be weird: it’s going to be about math rather than English, and I don’t think this will really be something that you can adapt to English, unfortunately.
I’m talking about: 99Math!
What is it?
It’s a Kahoot-like website (link here) which generates math questions for a live quiz or for homework purposes based on the different subjects of math you want to review with them.
- Addition, Subtraction, Multiplication and Division
- Order of Operations;
- Percent; finding the share, the whole, relation or comparing percentages.
- Conversions: From km to m or m to cm or other. You can even do Imperial units as well.
- Rounding; rounding to the nearest tenth, hundredth, etc.
- Comparing and Ordering; comparing using <, > or = with natural numbers, decimals or integers, etc.
- Perimeter and Area: You can mostly only do… rectangle or triangle, or other shapes like tetragon perimeter and pentagon perimeter. You cannot combine rectangles with triangles, it seems.
- Number Line; identify some natural numbers, fractions or the decimals on the number line.
- Equation; This can be used for a beginning of algebra, because you can have addition, subtraction, multiplication and division by finding the variables minuend and subtrahend, etc.
- Fractions; You can identify fractions, find the shape from the fractions, convert and even have fraction of whole number.
- Decimals; addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, conversion, rounding, comparing, ordering, number line and exponents. All through decimals.
- Exponents; you can have them practice finding the power of certain numbers.
- Money; you can identify, convert, multiply and divide money. There are EUROs and US dollars, but not Canadian currency as of the writing of this particular post.
- Time; converting days into weeks, or seconds into hours, etc., but also how to read and write time based on an analog clock.
Just like with a few websites in its genre, you can choose the duration of the game and you can adapt different things like integers, and have custom limits as well.
The minimum amount of students you need is 3 players.
The students solve their own questions while the teacher can see their progress on the board. At the end of a round, the teacher can also see the mistakes and explain to the students.
That’s gonna be it for me today,
I hope you’ll have a great day! Be safe!
Miss PV

You must be logged in to post a comment.