[HN Gopher] Ask HN: Good sources of math exercises for ~10-17 y/o?
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       Ask HN: Good sources of math exercises for ~10-17 y/o?
        
       I have two kids, 10 & 12, and I'd like to provide them with some
       math homework that is at least somewhat tracking their current and
       upcoming "Common Core" work. The school isn't assigning any
       homework, and I am disappointed at how thin their knowledge of the
       topics is despite getting good grades. The market, both online and
       in print, is awash with material, but much of it is really poor
       quality. Often it is trying way too hard to put some new/cute/fun
       spin on topics that really just need pen, paper, and practice. So
       many videos, contrived stories, artwork, ... my kid is 12, not 5.
       Looking for any sites or book series folks have found useful.
       Ideally, these would be printable since they have to show their
       work on tests and are quite weak at this, especially with so much
       of their work exclusively on Chromebooks.
        
       Author : LVB
       Score  : 26 points
       Date   : 2024-05-06 16:37 UTC (6 hours ago)
        
       | thiago_fm wrote:
       | Better to let them live as they would like and learn math only if
       | they would like.
       | 
       | If your kids were really gifted or really inclined to learn it,
       | you wouldn't need to research it yourself.
       | 
       | Around that age 10-12 they generally can use the internet and
       | already have their own interests, and are smart enough to Google
       | it and build stuff by themselves.
       | 
       | If you keep getting that much involved in their lives they will
       | have development issues. You only get involved if they are really
       | slow and get a professional to help.
        
         | bjornlouser wrote:
         | > You only get involved if they are really slow
         | 
         | Was a reasonable approach in the previous century. Not clear
         | that it will be enough these days...
        
       | idontwantthis wrote:
       | Khan Academy is great, but for anything you're going to need to
       | sit down there with them. I'd start with the grade level test to
       | see what they are missing then you can hone in on that. Or if
       | they are missing some core concepts you can go back as many
       | grades as you need. With an hour per day of _your_ time as well
       | as theirs they can plow through multiple years of material in
       | months.
        
       | dyingkneepad wrote:
       | Video games often present some nice math lessons. Trying to
       | understand why the Grief runeword in Diablo 2 did so much more
       | damage than other items that had way bigger numbers was a great
       | exercise in math, lol (and I didn't fully grasp it until my
       | 20's).
       | 
       | Another example is card games, like Hearthstone or Pokemon TCG.
       | For younger kids you can focus on the more basic "how much damage
       | do you need to kill this?" or "given these coin flips, how much
       | damage can you expect on average?", while for the older kids you
       | can present bigger challenges like "how likely are you to start
       | with this card in hand?" or "how likely are you to find it in the
       | first 10 turns?", "how likely is it that this crucial card to
       | your gameplan is going to be hidden in the prize card list?" etc.
       | But perhaps the adult here needs to be good in card games in
       | order to be able to grasp the math behind the game and properly
       | teach kids.
       | 
       | Anyway, math is often hidden behind interesting things, which is
       | way better than boring plain exercises.
        
       | hnthrowaway0328 wrote:
       | Geometry could be fun, or elementary number theory.
        
       | Leftium wrote:
       | What kind of math homework? Word problems or just arithmetic? By
       | 17, I think I was taught algebra, geometry, and calculus.
       | 
       | It would be pretty simple to create a web app that produces
       | printable random arithmetic problems (with optional answer keys)
       | with levers for difficulty.
       | 
       | Other types of problems would be harder.
        
         | LVB wrote:
         | Quite the variety of problems, really. I'm seeing them work on
         | word problems, graphing, geometry, etc. The best resource I've
         | found is https://www.math-aids.com . It's pretty close to the
         | mark, actually, but some of the domains are just a bit rigid in
         | their configuration so I'm scoping out anything else.
        
       | Jeremy1026 wrote:
       | That is a pretty big range. A 10 year old is a year into
       | division. A 17 year old is starting Pre-Calc or Stats.
        
         | LVB wrote:
         | Yeah, meant only as a sample. I mainly mean leaving the really
         | introductory stuff behind. My emphasis now is ~middleschool.
        
         | geraldwhen wrote:
         | 17 was AP Calc 2. Division can be taught as early as 7,
         | probably earlier if you're doing enrichment at home.
        
       | NayamAmarshe wrote:
       | ChatGPT can work for such needs. People are already using it to
       | create workbooks.
        
       | yumraj wrote:
       | Alcumus
       | 
       | https://artofproblemsolving.com/alcumus/problem
        
         | sg47 wrote:
         | Probably one of the best if not the best out there. Worth every
         | penny.
        
           | LVB wrote:
           | I'm just browsing the site now. Did you purchase their books,
           | courses, other?
        
             | yumraj wrote:
             | Yes, I have purchased their elementary level (under Beast
             | Academy brand) as well we later books.
             | 
             | Have also subscribed to their online classes. Alcumus is
             | free. I like AoPS and can recommend them.
        
               | soferio wrote:
               | Came here to make sure that Art of problem-solving and
               | beast Academy are mentioned. They are fantastic. My son
               | is deep into art of problem-solving after having finished
               | beast Academy.
        
       | ms-menardi wrote:
       | Could solve Project Euler problems in Lua - aka, the easiest
       | programming language to learn
       | 
       | https://projecteuler.net/
       | 
       | Alternatively, you could get a homeschool math textbook. They're
       | written differently because the assumption is that the kid is
       | going to have to teach themselves, and as such they are
       | significantly more thorough and easy to understand. I highly
       | recommend them. Don't get the kind that are "workbooks", those
       | are usually trash. Find a good textbook that the kid can write in
       | their own notebook for and sell after they're done with it.
       | They'll learn how Ebay works, and algebra!
        
       | light_triad wrote:
       | The series of books published by Haese Mathematics used in the
       | International Baccalaureate (IB) programs are quite good. Lots of
       | worked out examples, practice sets and detailed answers to
       | problems available. You can Google for free pdfs online and print
       | the sections you need:
       | 
       | https://www.haesemathematics.com/international-baccalaureate...
        
       | geraldwhen wrote:
       | I like the IXL workbooks. They seem good enough.
        
       | kebsup wrote:
       | The math Olympiad problems were quite fun from what I remember,
       | even though I never got past the regional round. I bet the
       | previous years will be available online.
        
       | smokey_the_bear wrote:
       | Mathacademy.com will curate an adaptive course for 4th grade math
       | thru college
        
       | zachlatta wrote:
       | They might like https://SineRider.com which was built by a bunch
       | of teenagers at Hack Club, a nonprofit I work for.
       | 
       | It's been played thousands of times and is a super cool way of
       | building intuition around function composition.
        
       | blobcode wrote:
       | For a younger age group (13-15 maybe), George F. Simmons'
       | "Precalculus Mathematics in a Nutshell"
       | (https://www.amazon.com/Precalculus-Mathematics-Nutshell-Geom...)
       | is quite good though might require a bit of help to grasp. It
       | features lots of exercises and a quite decent explanations for
       | the age range.
        
       | avmich wrote:
       | Here is a good book for some of the school-level math -
       | https://archive.org/details/skanavii/mode/2up - in Russian.
        
       | nickd2001 wrote:
       | Good question :) We've a similar challenge to you, kids a few
       | years younger, despite some efforts in school by teachers, they
       | still don't get fed enough of the cool hard stuff they're hungry
       | for, and youngest in particular finishes schoolwork early
       | including extensions and gets bored. So I've done some searching
       | possibly similar to you. found this : https://ukmt.org.uk. which
       | has some good resources. Also just purchased off eBay this
       | weekend, the Murderous Maths series by Kjartan Poskitt. Remains
       | to be seen how good that'll be, might be a bit young for yours,
       | although he did write some other books possibly for older kids.
       | Some schools here in UK use this : https://sparxmaths.com. Maybe
       | you can use that as an individual? Main thing is make sure to
       | keep it fun, right? Playing card games is good too I think. Ones
       | our family played include - "Oh hell". - like a simpler Bridge,
       | you declare how many tricks you'll make and after a round you
       | score 1 point for each trick plus an extra 10 if you made exactly
       | what you said you would no more no less - quite tactical
       | especially if you plan to make 0 tricks. "Black Lady" - sometimes
       | called "Hearts" - each Heart is 1 bad point, Queen of Spades 13
       | bad point, King of Spades 10 and Ace 7, aim of the game is to not
       | win tricks containing the bad cards. Seems to me those card games
       | teach the brain to work in such a way that helps when doing
       | various unrelated maths problems later on.
        
       | gtvwill wrote:
       | Lol but math for what use? Math just for maths sake? High risk of
       | making math boring af.
       | 
       | Get out and do some woodworking or metalworking and build
       | something with it. You will probably both learn some math or
       | realize how useless what you know is.
       | 
       | Make a footpath down the side of your house, stick some curves
       | in. Calculate the ground moved and concrete needed. Let your kids
       | do the math. Let your kids do the design. Buy what they say you
       | need. Embrace any failures as a family and learn from it. Give
       | the kids a feeling if responsibility and ownership and they will
       | learn the math during those lessons better than any textbook will
       | teach them.
        
       | viraptor wrote:
       | While this is online, the work on paper is pretty much required
       | for harder topics. https://mathacademy.com/ starts at where your
       | kids currently are and then they can work as fast or as slow as
       | they need through practical exercises.
        
       | chiph wrote:
       | What about the PSAT and SAT prep books? They are tests only (with
       | answers at the end of the chapter) and don't teach the
       | techniques, but I found that my math skills got better just by
       | doing more of it.
        
       | geocrasher wrote:
       | Suggestion: Anything that says math "problem", turn it into a
       | math _puzzle_ instead. A much more interesting way to look at
       | math.
        
       | sinkwool wrote:
       | I remember when I was a kid, Kangaroo math puzzles were
       | incredibly fun. I don't know if you can get your hands on some
       | materials, but they were such a blast.
       | https://mathkangaroo.org/mks/
       | 
       | I recommend getting some math olympiad books; at that level
       | they're just like puzzles so should be fun.
       | 
       | https://artofproblemsolving.com/wiki/index.php/Olympiad_book...
       | 
       | Go for general problem books (non-topic-specific), and start with
       | the easiest problems that they find fun.
       | 
       | I remember the following two books were interesting (though might
       | be somewhat harder). You might find them on the internet archive
       | or pdf's online.
       | 
       | Challenging Mathematical Problems With Elementary Solutions
       | (Volume I, Combinatorial Analysis and Probability Theory) - A. M.
       | Yaglom, I. M. Yaglom.
       | 
       | Challenging Mathematical Problems With Elementary Solutions
       | (Volume II, Problem From Various Branches of Mathematics) - A. M.
       | Yaglom, I. M. Yaglom.
       | 
       | Additionally, look into various olympiads:
       | 
       | American AMC 8 and AMC 10 from various years should be easiest:
       | 
       | https://artofproblemsolving.com/wiki/index.php/AMC_Problems_...
       | 
       | And when they feel adventurous, take a look at contests. Some
       | countries (e.g. Romania, Russia) have contests for lower grades,
       | though they are still quite difficult.
       | 
       | https://artofproblemsolving.com/community/c3754998_aops_year...
        
       | abrookewood wrote:
       | I used Brilliant (https://brilliant.org/) with my kids and it was
       | helpful, if only because they did try to explain some of the
       | theory around the work in different ways. Considering your
       | comment around videos and artwork, it might not be what you are
       | after, but you can check out some of their free courses to get an
       | idea of how they work.
       | 
       | The biggest issue for me was that it is concept based rather than
       | curriculum based, so it wasn't perfect for trying to teach them
       | on a regular basis, but it was helpful if we encountered a topic
       | they didn't understand.
        
       | octobus2021 wrote:
       | This might work if your kid is a self-starter and really driven
       | to improve himself/herself. Otherwise I highly recommend an
       | extracurricular math program; there are many different ones
       | depending on which area you are in. I know of Kumon and
       | Mathnasium, there's probably bunch of other ones too.
       | 
       | They maintain their own curriculum, often somewhat in sync with
       | school program, but ahead of it. They also help kids participate
       | in various math competitions, including Math Kangaroo, AMC 8/10,
       | etc.
       | 
       | Just make sure to carefully evaluate the program in advance, talk
       | to the teachers and the parents. They are typically NOT cheap,
       | but if you want your kids to get good at "maths" (R) it'll be
       | worth it.
        
       | sn9 wrote:
       | Another recommendation for Art of Problem Solving. The books even
       | have complete solutions manuals so they're perfect for self-
       | teaching.
       | 
       | https://artofproblemsolving.com/store
       | 
       | Try to see if they'd be using spaced repetition software like
       | Anki to schedule review of problems they've understood how to
       | solve.
        
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       (page generated 2024-05-06 23:02 UTC)