Læringsressourcer Cuisenaire stænger lille gruppe sæt: 155 dele plastik sæt, flerfarvet

Brand:‎Learning Resources

3.7/5

kr
350.27

Lærer eleverne almindelige kernefærdigheder såsom brøker og måling med repræsentationer fra den virkelige verden. 155 plaststænger i 10 forskellige farver. Hver farve repræsenterer en forskellig stanglængde (1 cm – 10 cm). Nok stænger til 4-6 elever at bruge ad gangen.

EAN: 885523122138

Kategorier Legetøj og spil,

Ideel til alderen 4+. Nok stænger til 4-6 elever. 155 stænger i spand. Forbedre Common Core-færdigheder såsom brøker, måling og mere. Giv en konkret repræsentation af abstrakte matematiske begreber med plaststænger i 10 farvekodede længder (i intervaller på 1 cm fra 1 cm til 10 cm).
Batteries ‎1 Unknown batteries required.
Brand ‎Learning Resources
Color ‎Multi-color
Customer Reviews 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 525 ratings 4.6 out of 5 stars
Domestic Shipping Item can be shipped within U.S.
International Shipping This item can be shipped to select countries outside of the U.S. Learn More
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‎Yes
Item model number ‎LER7513
Item Weight ‎14.4 ounces
Manufacturer ‎Learning Resources
Manufacturer Part Number ‎LER7513
Material Type ‎Plastic
Number of Items ‎1
Product Dimensions ‎6 x 6.1 x 3.2 inches
Size ‎3.2 H x 6 L x 6.1 W

3.7

8 Review
5 Star
83
4 Star
8
3 Star
3
2 Star
2
1 Star
4

Skriv din anmeldelse

Din e-mail vil ikke blive offentliggjort. Alle obligatoriske felter er markeret med*

Scritto da: Margo
Effective
This is a very effective tool for learning math. It’s a great manipulative for the younger children.
Scritto da: Renee Thorpe
This Set is Legit
I enjoyed cuisinaire rods in 4th grade. I remember that my teacher even had the scale so you could check sums that way (in addition to length). I know that the plastic sets get a lot of complaints from customers. This set is wooden and clearly and completely painted... exactly like the rods I fooled around with so many years ago. I bought these for my just - shy- of - 6 year old grandson whose class is not teaching addition by using memorization of tables (honestly, I feel that's the only way to go, but this is not the place for a curriculum debate). He had been confused by the complications of equations, and I could see he just needed to wrap his head around the actual physical process of something having greater units than something else. I wanted him to find an enjoyable way for us to just cut back the approach and see what a number represents. So I bought him this set. The set comes with no instructions or hints, so you kind of have to do your own research. I got him the set on a day when his uber-competitive , smarter, older brother did not also get a new toy or surprise. Wow, did this make the rods seem very valuable and special. The little one was really chuffed to be sole owner of this new interesting set of blocks and that motivated him to invest a bunch of time checking them out. But all I did was show him how the white cube was "one" and the red rectangle twice its size was "two" and so on. Immediately, he just started making a stair-step of the blocks, and he was rapt for (I am not kidding) half an hour, just making these gradients. With rods he wasn't using, I showed him that the one and the nine rods were the same length as the ten rod. So he caught on and started organizing the rods to equal length. Amazingly, he loved calling the rods the different numbers that they were representing. In a little while, he said, very matter-of-factly, "these are all different ways of making ten!" Like it was his own realization and he was very happy to discover this simplicity. I have left it at that for now, and will be doing some other challenges with him next, but the main thing is, a little guy who hated math, lost in an overcrowded class room at school, has discovered his own basic understanding of addition, and I didn't have to do more than get him started with the number concept. Looking forward to the next step towards learning his sums and subtractions, using this set.
Scritto da: KB
Cuisenaire Rods: Excellent math materials for modeling numbers, number relationships, area, volume, word problems, & even music!
I highly recommend that you buy the wooden Cuisenaire rods. The precision of the lengths is better than the plastic ones. This particular set is beautifully made and comes in a clear plastic container. The assortment is a good one for multiple uses of the rods. I bought a second container for tutoring once I saw the quality. This basic set was later developed into the Dienes Blocks, also called base ten blocks, wherein the color pattern continues using the white one rod and the orange ten rod. I recommend buying base ten blocks that build on this color system to make understanding the relations among numbers more easy. If Cuisenaire rods are new to you, you are in for a treat. As a modeling tool for arithmetic, they are beyond compare. When using them to represent the numbers one to ten, children see and feel relative length and learn measurement in centimeters. Instead of the flawed flashcard method for memorizing facts, lining up the rods beside a meter stick shows the learner exactly what 5+3 or 3+5 looks like. For multiplication, the rods are extremely valuable for showing that eight yellow rods is not the same situation as five brown rods though they are the same total length (8x5=5x8). Beyond this, the rods can represent fractional parts and are useful for making models for area and volume. On YouTube there is a remarkable video of Gaetagno working with Montreal first graders in 1963 that begins to show how Cuisenaire rods can encourage high level thinking in very young children. The Miquon books are helpful resources for using these rods. For those of you who work with the Singapore block diagrams or the Math Playground Thinking Blocks activities, the Cuisenaire rods are invaluable aids for representing word problems. Music teachers can use the rods in measure groups to "annotate" simple rhythm patterns brilliantly. Strongest recommendation.
Scritto da: Stratohound
Beware cheap imitations!
This set contains 155 rods, which overlaps considerably with a full set of Cuisenaire rods, which has 241 rods. The manufacuring quality of the rods is consistent for each size and throughout the set. I would recommend buying a larger set of Cuisenaire rods--at least the full set of 241 rods--or two of these smaller sets (which might be cheaper, all in all), as the limitations of the small set become very ovious even when working with the rods by oneself with larger numbers or more rod-intensive configurations. I am a language teacher who is very interested in Gattegno's extension of Cuisenaire's invention of the colored rods for the teaching of mathematics and languages. I use Cuisenaire rods to create visual analogs of dialogues and sentence patterns so that my students can feel the difference between speaking word by word (which no one does in any language under normal circumstances, but they learn to do after having been conditioned with a grammar + vocabulary aproach to language learning) and instead phrase the words in intonational groups, much like musicians phrase notes and dancers phrase their steps. On a personal level, I also play around with the Cuisenaire rods to reteach myself basic mathematics, since I am one of the tens of millions of people who hit a wall in their study of math in elementary school. Reading Gattegno's books, I recall the mathematical terms used in class and the terror and confusion I felt as a kid who just wasn't getting it. I also intuitively recognize that, had I been taught visually and not verbally, I would have been much better at math and what Gattegno calls "mathematization." So I use the rods profesional for language teahcing and personally for my math re-education.
Scritto da: Angie VM
Excellent learning resource for kids
Highly recommended, good quality reglettes Cuisenaire, fantastic for teaching little ones the basic concepts of math. I wish they had more rods in the package but otherwise cool
Scritto da: Amazon Customer
Great value
As described. Good value also.
Scritto da: R
It was a big hit with my grandchildren.
My grandkids love it.
Scritto da: Marc Croteau
my daughter really loves it
as expected my daughter really loves it

Relaterede produkter

Oplev vores internationale netværk

Vi sender til 28 lande, over 200.000 produkter. Hold dig opdateret, tilmeld dig nyhedsbrevet.

Array