Math Center Activities

Math Center Activities

Today I want to talk all about the activities that students complete in centers and when they meet with the teacher for small group practice.

Keep Math Center Activities Simple!

I see so many teachers who make math center activities complicated and time-consuming to prepare. 

You don’t need to have six different activities! Those are just six different things that you have to make/buy, print, prep, and keep track of. You don’t need that craziness! I have four different centers and only two require any prep at all. 

You don’t need to change the center activities every week. Again, that is a ton of work for you. It also takes up valuable class time because you are having to explain the new activities every Monday. Use math center activities that can stay the same all year!

My Math Center Activities:

I am going to share the four center rotations that I have used in my classroom. I chose these activities because they are super easy to prep, can stay the same all year, but include meaningful practice for my students.

Meet the Teacher

This is by far the most important rotation during our math centers. This is the center where students meet with me in small guided math groups. This is the time that I get to meet them at their level and provide the differentiation that they need.

I keep this center simple by using manipulatives, whiteboards, and my curriculum. I give students a problem from the lesson, practice sheet, or homework sheet. It might be a problem from today’s lesson or it might be a problem from yesterday or the week before. This just depends on the needs of the students in the group. We take the problem and use manipulatives to build the numbers. We use whiteboards to show our numbers and mathematical thinking. I am right there to help them. We can work as a group, as partners, or individually. This is nothing fancy, takes almost no prep, but is some of the most meaningful time I spend with my learners.

I do use interactive notebooks during the meet the teacher center rotation. I DO NOT do this every time that we meet. I probably give them an activity every few times that we meet. 

The activity is used primarily as an assessment for me. As students are solving a problem, I am able to take a quick look and decide if the group is ready to move on or if they need more practice with a skill. If they need more practice, we get out the whiteboards and correct the problems together.

Technology

I was blessed to have a small group set of Chromebooks in my classroom. If you have any computers or devices, I highly recommend having a technology center. Kids love technology! The best part is that this center does not require ANY prep! You can still have student accountability with a technology center if you use an app or website that tracks and monitors student progress.

Websites or apps that I recommend for this center:

Zearn

Prodigy

Moby Max

iReady

Splash Math

Independent

This is a hands-on center rotation that is actually a spiral review of topics that we have previously learned. Since it is a review, students are more independent and successful with the center activities, but also getting practice. We may be working on geometry whole group, but the activities in this center may be multiplication- a unit we finished already.

In this center rotation, students will complete ten different activities over the course of 3-4 weeks. The activities are hands-on such as sorts, spinners, rolling dice, measuring things, and coloring 100s charts to show patterns. There are also task cards and even math journaling.

I allow students to complete the centers in any order that they wish. Since there are ten activities and only a small group is at this center at one time, I only need. to prep one copy of each activity. Since there are ten activities in each unit, I am only having to prep a new unit once per month! 

I do take a grade from this center, At the end of the month, students will turn in their one recording book that holds the work from all ten of the centers.

Math Facts

I was very lucky to have a small group of iPads. If you have more devices, besides those that are being used in the technology center, I highly recommend having your kids start this center by practicing their math facts on XtraMath. It is a great website that provides differentiated math fact practice. The teacher and the parents can receive weekly reports that show the student’s progress and the exact facts they are currently working on. 

Since XtraMath only takes about 5-10 minutes, my students will spend the remainder of their time playing a math fact game. I like to keep this super simple so that I am not wasting time teaching kids how to play new games. I have a small collection of familiar kid games: Chutes & Ladders, Candy Land, Connect Four, etc. I keep a stack of flashcards with the games. Students play with a partner or small group. They flip a flashcard over and answer the fact. If they are accurate, they get to take a normal turn in the game. If they are not accurate, their turn is skipped and their partner flips a flashcard. 

I love this type of game because it is super cheap, doesn’t require any printing or prep, and doesn’t take long at all to teach to students because they have played the games before! All you need to do is switch out the board games and flashcards from time to time.

If you don’t have the technology for this center, you can always have them do flashcards or fact practice in a sleeve protector with a dry erase marker. Maybe they can set a timer for five minutes and then move on to the game component.

Fast Finishers Math Center Activities

The independent center is the only center rotation that I have where students might finish early and need something additional to do. Again, I am all about keeping it simple. Students don’t need a list of a dozen different things that they can do!

One option is to have a couple of math skill games for fast finishers to play. My students love this, but the only problem is that you need more than one person to be finished in order to play the game together.

The fast finisher activity that I actually like the best is the math menu. The math menu includes lots of fun math projects that extend a student’s learning and can be done independently. The activities are intended to challenge them and encourage them to use their creativity to work with real-life math examples.

I ask my students to complete a side dish first, then an entrée and finally, they can complete a dessert activity. 

Side Dishes: These projects are intended to be warm-up activities. They get students to write about the topic and exploring the math vocabulary.

Entree: These projects ask students to apply the skills they have learned to a real-world math problem. These activities often require students to write about their problem-solving strategies.

Dessert: These projects allow students to apply higher-order thinking skills to create something that demonstrates their knowledge of the skill such as a game, poem, video, presentation, poster, etc.

I love my math center activities because they don’t change every week. Students will get a new unit in their independent center each month, but the activities are consistent from unit to unit. Students don’t need to be taught how to do the center every month.

I also love that I am not spending hours every week copying, cutting, and printing! I prep my independent centers at the beginning of the year and don’t have prep throughout the school year!

I only have one center that I actually have to grade and that is only once per month! The other centers send me reports!

Finally, I love that almost every center is differentiated. The only center that is not automatically differentiated is the independent center. They can easily be differentiated by crossing off a few of the higher-level activities for those learners who are not quite ready for the challenge.

I think that math centers are the best thing since sliced bread! If you have missed the first post in this series, you can click HERE to read all about why I think every classroom should use math centers and guided math groups.

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