

A free trial is available and then plans start at $4.99 a month. There are video tutorials, virtual assistant and games where kids learn coding skills while they play.

Minicoders offers logic games in Roblox for ages 7-12. Scratch Jr-coding app where young children (ages 5-7) can program their own interactive stories and games Teachers can create practice assignments and get targeted insights to their students’ knowledge gaps and misconceptions.
#Math websites full version#
ST Math’s full version is currently free to all Texans- visit /texas to sign up! Instruction and Practice for Middle Schoolīytelearn– Bytelearn is a digital teaching assistant for math that helps students step by step in solving math problems, providing help and feedback the way a teacher would. It’s a great supplement (60-90 minutes a week suggested) to build number sense. ST Math games include more than 35,000 puzzles with interactive representations of math topics that align to all state standards.

It can be especially helpful for ELL students, dyslexic students, or students with learning disabilities, but all students can benefit from it. ST Math is different than the other sites as it is a visual program that doesn’t use words. Sample screen shot from Happy Numbers ST Math It uses many virtual manipulatives to help students move from concrete to abstract thinking. Happy Numbers is for grades preK through 5. I have used the free demo games and students enjoyed them well enough, but I didn’t love it enough to pay for it Happy Numbers Free demo games are available, and teachers/parents can sign up for a monthly or annual subscription. It has both intervention and enrichment resources. The program adapts to the individual child, providing interactive instruction and assessment. Dreambox.ĭreambox is an online learning program for grades K-8 focusing on number sense and conceptual learning. For younger students I wasn’t nearly as happy and prefer other sites. My 4th grade students love Freckle and would even do it at home. Students choose a character and earn coins to customize it, which they really enjoy. It gives pretests and then continuously adapts to each student’s individual skills, so each student is getting the appropriate challenge, whether they’re working at, above, or below grade level. It has a free version that has worked fine for my purposes even for use with a full class. I have used Freckle and while I put it under this section it is actually good only for practice, not actual instruction. I would only not recommend this one for highly gifted students- I tried that and even setting them above grade level it was too repetitive and got boring. Average students can easily use the program independently. One 3rd grade student I tutor had fairly extreme special needs and using Zearn at a lower grade level was very helpful to him. I have personally used Zearn with 1st-4th grade students. Students receive immediate feedback on every answer and the program moves to intervention when needed. The teachers are engaging, most lessons use interactive virtual manipulatives, and there is a wide variety of activities. The lessons are extremely well done and many include printable practice sheets (that the digital teacher walks the student through). The lessons are aligned with Eureka/Engage NY, but you don’t need to use those curriculums to benefit from them. It is a non profit so all of its digital lessons are completely free. Zearn is the site I use most often for comprehensive instruction. The sites in this section require students to have accounts set up by a teacher or parent. Comprehensive Instructional Sites for Elementary See also “Recommended Resources” for websites for teachers and homeschool parents to use. Here are my recommended math websites for kids to use directly.
