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Math in Focus is an elementary math curriculum using
the Singapore approach to math. It is distributed through Houghton
Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company in the United States. The kit
I received was the 3A Homeschool Kit, which included the Teacher's
Edition, Student Textbook (hardcover, non-consumable), Student
Workbook (consumable), Assessments Book (consumable), and Virtual
Manipulatives CD-ROM. This was a complete 1 st semester set. That
said, I don't believe most homeschool families would find much
benefit in the very pricey Teacher's Edition. It is designed primarily
for classroom use. The only potential benefit I can see would be
the answer keys that are in the teacher's book. But for the most
part, the answers in third grade are not too hard to figure out
on one's own.
Level 3A includes 9 chapters that are designed to be done over
two weeks each. The chapters include: numbers to 10,000, mental
math and estimation, addition to 10,000, subtraction to 10,000,
using bar models for addition and subtraction, multiplication tables
of 6-9, multiplication, division, and using bar models for multiplication
and division. The Assessments Book has pre-test and chapter tests
for each chapter. The lessons all follow the Singapore approach
of concrete to pictorial to abstract concepts. The textbook is
full of colorful and cute illustrations, with lots of white space
on the page, making them easy to follow and not overwhelming. The
workbook is in grayscale with diagrams and illustrations and generally
between 2 and 12 problems on a page. Every chapter in the workbook
ends with a "Put on Your Thinking Cap" exercise applying critical
thinking skills to the concepts taught in that chapter. There are
cumulative reviews every couple of chapters, reviewing all of the
previous skills.
I will admit that at first glance, the CD entitled "Virtual Manipulatives" sounded
oxymoronic to me. How can you call something a "manipulative" when
you can't manipulate it? However, it is really a neat tool that
has on-screen manipulatives, such as counters, base-ten blocks,
number lines, number charts, graphs, fractions, etc. For families
that travel, this would be like taking an entire suitcase full
of math manipulatives right in your laptop! Don't think you are
going to save a lot of money on your pricey manipulative kits,
however. This CD runs $105 retail.
The price of the Math in Focus kit is probably the biggest
drawback. However, if you eliminate the teacher's edition, it is
pretty reasonable. Each semester's kit costs $124 through Saxon.
The Virtual Manipulatives CD is separate. On the publisher's website
however, you can buy the pieces a la carte and save money by not
buying the teacher's kit (or the assessments if you are not a "tester").
Just the student text and workbook for each semester is $34. The
Assessments Book (for the whole year) is $38. If you already have
and use manipulatives, you don't need the Virtual Manipulatives,
but if you travel a lot, it might be a worthwhile investment and
would take you through several years of school for several kids.
I would recommend this product (minus the Teacher's Edition) to
a homeschooler looking for a comprehensive math curriculum from
a well-known and reliable tradition and publisher.
Product review by Kim Kargbo, The Old Schoolhouse® Magazine,
LLC, January 2010
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