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What are your Favorite Supplements? All Ages All Subjects


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Looking for ideas for our support group Library. 

All ages of kids from K through high school.  

All subjects including games, DVD's, Hands on etc.

These are checked out for a month so need to be supplements that can be used in that time period.

What have been your favorite supplements that you have used and your kids loved? Or that you wished you owned?

Thanks so much. 

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Math

- geoboard

http://www.learningresources.com/product/mobile/plastic+geoboard+classpack.do?null

- tangrams

http://www.learningresources.com/product/mobile/brights%21--8482-+tangrams+classpack.do?sortby=bestMatchesDescend

 

Science

- spring balance

E.g. http://www.hometrainingtools.com/spring-scale-100-g-1-n/p/BS-SCALE4/?fee=2&fep=505&gclid=CPiC7JKbkMUCFQqEfgodE7oATQ

- balance beam (the learning resource kind, not the pricier beam balance)

e.g. http://www.hometrainingtools.com/ohaus-school-balance/p/BS-1210/

- microscope (the simple starter kind that is < $100)

e.g. http://www.amazon.com/My-First-Lab-Duo-Scope-Microscope/dp/B000NOU54O

 

Earth Science

- rock set

- handheld geocache GPS (entry level kind)

 

I had owned most of the ThinkFun games and they are great for logic. However for games maybe ask for donations instead of buying new.

My 9 year old had a hard time remember the continents until he played Risk.

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Math and logic games:

 

Math Dash

 

Equate (Here is a link to the Advanced Tiles )

 

Quarto

 

Iota

 

SET

 

Stratego

 

Rat-a-Tat Cat

 

Continuo

 

Clue

 

Chess

 

 

Spelling/vocabulary games:

 

Bananagrams  (Also Bananagrams has versions available for different language such as Spanish, French, Hebrew ...)

 

Scrabble

 

 

History game:

 

Perspective: Timeline Game

 

 

Algebra 1 and 2 supplements:   Anita Harnadek's  books  Algebra Word Problems Book 1 and  Algebra II Word Problems

 

Also  How to Solve Word Problems in Algebra by Mildred Johnson

 

 

Books:

 

Balance Benders from Critical Thinking Company.

 

MindBenders

 

Logic Links from MindWare.  There are four book levels, A through D.  There is also a boxed set of puzzles.  That link is here

 

 

Regards,

Kareni

 

 

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My kids like these fraction bars as well. They're nice because they have fractions, decimals, and percentages on different sides. The kids enjoyed using a bucket balance to see how 2/3 compared to 4/5, for example. We also made a bucket balance from Lego and that was a fun project, but if you're looking at a lending library you're going to want to just buy a real one.

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Things I'd love to check out or have and love to use:

 

Math It

 

My First Microscope

 

GeoSafari Talking Globe and/or the other Geosafari interactive products

 

The Global Puzzle  (there's also a Global animal puzzle but I couldn't find it on RR)

 

Where in the World game

 

I've also appreciated checking out audio CDs of homeschool conference talks. So a collection of high quality audio CDs for the teacher/mom are awesome!  

 

Lisa

 

 

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Games/Toys:

Sum Swamp

Alpha-Bug Soup

Right Start card games

Snap Circuits

Tinker Toys

wooden building blocks

 

Videos:

Whistlefritz videos (foreign language immersion for little kids)

Horrible Histories (live action series)

all the Attenborough natural history videos

Mathtacular

Yoga Kids: ABCs

Liberty's Kids

The Little Travelers

 

Books:

Horrible Histories

Dead Famous

Horrible Science

Life of Fred elementary series

One Small Square series

Basher (different books for different subjects, like Physics, Rocks & Minerals, Algebra, etc.)

Children Just Like Me

The Private Eye

 

 

I've heard the Muggins math games are good, but haven't gotten to try them personally.

 

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So many great ideas already. It's hard to think of additional things, but here goes:

 

- Classical Kids Collection CD series (Beethoven Lives Upstairs, etc.)

- Opera for Kids

- globe and giant world map

- musical instruments (especially percussion, such as shakers, small drums, tamborine, etc.)

- DVD sets from Devine Entertainment: The Inventors' Specials; The Artists' Specials; The Composers' Specials

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For middle school history-- I like

the Genevieve Foster books-- they really help to tie World history together http://www.amazon.com/Genevieve-Foster/e/B005DJSBNQ/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1?qid=1430149565&sr=8-

 

The Steve Sheinkin books really wake up American history  http://www.amazon.com/Steve-Sheinkin/e/B001JPA91K/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1?qid=1430149657&sr=8-1-fkmr0

 

 

 

 

 

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Another thought ~

 

Peggy Kaye has some good books for the younger ages  such as

Games for Reading: Playful Ways to Help Your Child Read

 

Games for Writing: Playful Ways to Help Your Child Learn to Write

 

Games for Math: Playful Ways to Help Your Child Learn Math, From Kindergarten to Third Grade

 

And don't forget

Family Math (Equals Series) 
by Jean Kerr Stenmark and Virginia Thompson
 
Regards,
Kareni

 

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