![]() ![]() I read through several different recommendations, and the rationale behind each strategy made perfect sense to me, making it difficult to choose ONE approach. I assumed there would be one clear-cut answer to this question, but as it turns out, everyone and their mother seems to have a different opinion on which multiplication table to focus on first. What’s the best order for teaching times tables? Of course, your child’s math curriculum will be dictated by the school/district she’s in (unless you homeschool, of course), but this seems to be the age range teachers aim for when it comes to teaching multiplication. When I think back to my own childhood, I can remember memorizing my times tables in grades 3 and 4, but just to be sure, I did a quick search on Google and it seems the recommended age at which a child should know her multiplication table ranges between 9 and 11, which seems about right to me. At what age should you know your times tables? If we don’t make teaching multiplication a priority when our children are young, it will make it harder for them to learn other math concepts as they grow. Why? Because times tables are an essential building block in math, and help children with other math strategies and concepts, like fractions, decimals, percentages, area, perimeter, measures, and even telling time. ![]() Why teaching times tables at home is importantĪs painful as it is to teach kids multiplication, it’s important that we get involved and help them practice at home. I can barely add 2 single-digit numbers together without a calculator these days (thank goodness for smart phones!), and the idea of teaching multiplication to my sweet girl makes me break into a cold sweat.īut teaching times tables to kids is a right of passage for parents, and I’m pretty sure I’m not going to get out of this one alive, so I figure I may as well be prepared.Īnd since I know there are HEAPS of other parents out there (literally) pulling their hair out as they attempt to help their child memorize their multiplication tables, I’m sharing my favorite games and activities to teach kids multiplication without losing your sanity. This worked out well for my mother as math was not her forte and teaching times tables wasn’t exactly on her list of priorities when we were growing up, and while I always assumed I would pass my love for math onto my own daughter, age (and sleep deprivation) has a way of changing us. ![]() It was my most favorite subject in school, and while most of my friends struggled with multiplication tables and long division, I loved it. Were you good at math when you were growing up? I was. ![]()
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