Thanks so much for stopping by! If you enjoyed this post, we’d love it if you could share Education to the Core with a friend and BOTH of you can receive $5 off a purchase of $10 or more with the code: FRIEND5 in our Education to the Core shop.Īt Education to the Core, we provide done-for-you curriculum that is simple, fun, and engaging! In order to be an effective educator, you have to take care of you first! We strive to make a healthy work-life balance a reality for you each and every day. If you have a favorite you use, please share the link in the comments section below. We hope that you find our list of Math Videos For Primary Teachers useful in your classrooms. Learn about all of the different tools we use to measure with. It begins to teach students conversions with money. This math video on money is a little higher level. The beat to this video is AWESOME! Kiddos learn what each coin looks like and its value. □Ĭute subtraction song based around a little kid’s birthday cake. And it also discusses different strategies to use when subtracting! There is also an addition counterpart to this video. □ There is also a subtraction counterpart to this song. My students love adding with the pirates! I give them a whiteboard and marker and they work the problems out while singing with the video. I’ve added some hand movements to the chorus of this skip counting by 10s math video. I LOVE how this video uses the one hundred chart to show kiddos how to find the 5s pattern. Repetitive counting in this math video will help your students learn to count by 2s. Students will learn the name of the major 3D shapes, as well as everyday objects that represent them. Identify shapes while working on sides and vertices of each. One more fun video to help your students practice counting by ones to 100.Īlong with identifying the shapes, students will get to practice drawing them in the air. Your students won’t be able to resist dancing and counting to 100 with DJ Count. Practice counting by ones to 100 with this great math video! Using YouTube is an amazing resource that gives so many great options. I Can Count to 10, by Jack Hartmann Number Songs for Kids. Get up and workout while counting to 20 with this math video by Jack Hartmann. One Potato, Two Potatoes, by Super Simple Songs 15. Here are some of my favorites covering many of the math skills our students have to learn.įor little learners, this video helps them practice counting to 20. They are a great tool to get your students up and moving, while learning math skills. Click the link below for over 30 videos about 2D Shapes.Math videos are great to use in a variety of settings! I use math videos to get my students started in the morning, during indoor recesses, brain breaks, 5 minute time gaps, and of course in math block. I collected all of these videos, plus many more, into a YouTube playlist. Students might enjoy making other shapes, too! 2D Shapes Playlist You might have four students get together to make a hexagon like this video. They have several of them about specific shapes. They make some of the best educational videos for kids. They only have two videos about shapes but I hope they make more! I found them while I was searching for shape videos. I had to list this one first because I’m just smitten with Words with Puffballs. They make a great introduction or review of a specific shape. Here are several videos that only focus on one shape. This is the cutest story! Using triangles, this video teaches the difference between distinguishing (sides, corners) and non-distinguishing (size, color, orientation) characteristics of shapes. They look for a circle, rectangle, square, triangle, diamond, and oval. I love Harry Kindergarten and your students are going to LOVE this video! Students act like secret agents and find shapes around the room. Then, it counts the sides and corners of these shapes: triangle, square, rectangle, pentagon, hexagon, heptagon, and octagon. First, it explains how to find the sides and corners of shapes. Use this video to introduce or reinforce the concept of the number of sides and corners shapes have. Play this video for a brain break or maybe even for indoor recess! Students do exercises like jumping jacks with a triangle, hopping with a square, and touching their toes with a pentagon. Here’s another video that gets your students moving as they review 2D shapes. It also incorporates how many straight sides each shape has. The song focuses on a circle, square, rectangle, triangle, and an oval. This video is perfect for a brain break! It gets students up and moving, drawing shapes with their hands. Use them to introduce or review shapes, as a math center, for early finishers, or just for fun! 2D Shape Videos for Kindergarten I love sharing them with you because I hope to save you the time of searching for them yourself. Thankfully, I found quite a few! The videos below are my favorite. I spent a bit of time searching YouTube for shape videos to use in our lessons. We recently finished up a review of 2D shapes.
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