Math is all about practice. So what a person have to do in math is to keep practicing and do not think about the answer before starting a math problem. Just use the rules and formulas and apply them, what u get at last is the answer. So have no fear.
Just break apart your numbers or use a calculater.
In the context of math Mancala is mostly a counting a game. It's often called a "count and capture" game and more often than not considered a strategy game.
kl
math is multicultural because math is everywhere everyone in the world does math. Even the strategy there could be different ones but the answer is always going to be the same
Math is all about practice. So what a person have to do in math is to keep practicing and do not think about the answer before starting a math problem. Just use the rules and formulas and apply them, what u get at last is the answer. So have no fear.
There are lots in math. Some are break apart and add on .
You take all the answers and add it all together. Break apart is a multiplication strategy. To multiply 45 and 6, you first break apart the 45 into 40 and 5, now multiply both with multiplier 6. Then add both of them. This is 40x6 + 5x6= 240 + 30 = 270
break means too pull a math question apart. (im not sure)
A break-apart drawing is other wise known as a math mountain in certain grades
A break-apart drawing is other wise known as a math mountain in certain grades
A break-apart drawing is other wise known as a math mountain in certain grades
Just break apart your numbers or use a calculater.
This is taught as a mental math strategy Typically you "break" each addend into tens and ones to solve 45 + 32 the students do this: For example: 45 "breaks into" 40 + 5 Similarly 32 "breaks into" 30 + 2 Students then add the tens 40 + 30 = 70 and then add the ones 5 + 2 = 7 and then add the two sums together 77 ...... 45 + 32 = 77
In the context of math Mancala is mostly a counting a game. It's often called a "count and capture" game and more often than not considered a strategy game.
kl
math is multicultural because math is everywhere everyone in the world does math. Even the strategy there could be different ones but the answer is always going to be the same