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56 of 58 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Quick Counts Build Confidence and Interest in Arithmetic!
Greg Tang has put together a series of counting riddles which challenge you to find short cuts to a faster answer. Each problem provides the introduction to a new challenge. The riddles are written in verse and encourage you to develop your skills in patern recognition, grouping, and multi-step thinking. The book will be as much fun for parents as for youngsters, and...
Published on April 11, 2001 by Donald Mitchell

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14 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Great idea
This book is wonderful. Finally there are great books that celebrate math!! This is an awesome book for older children. I'd say at least 1st grade (some Kindergartener would really enjoy it). However, done properly, it's too time consuming for a preschooler. My 3 year old, even though he's very bright, could only hang for 3 pages doing it the right way. After that...
Published on August 2, 2005 by J. Budde


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56 of 58 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Quick Counts Build Confidence and Interest in Arithmetic!, April 11, 2001
By 
Donald Mitchell "Jesus Loves You!" (Thanks for Providing My Reviews over 109,000 Helpful Votes Globally) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Grapes Of Math (Hardcover)
Greg Tang has put together a series of counting riddles which challenge you to find short cuts to a faster answer. Each problem provides the introduction to a new challenge. The riddles are written in verse and encourage you to develop your skills in patern recognition, grouping, and multi-step thinking. The book will be as much fun for parents as for youngsters, and can provide the basis for spotting interesting problems in the world around you. Clever rhymes, hints, and colorful illustrations combine to provide plenty of visual and mental stimulation. The riddles focus on natural objects like animals, insects, plants, and fruit to increase awareness of the patterns occuring around us.

The riddles have fun names (like Fish School, Grapes of Math, Win-Doze, and For the Birds). My favorite riddles were Ant Attack and It's a Jungle Out There.

The left hand page contains a colorful computer illustration provided by Harry Briggs. These are large and appropriately ambiguous to hide the patterns a little. Color and shape are especially used well to complicate the counting problem. On the right hand page is a riddle, containing a clue at the end. "To help you find the right amount/Group by fives before you count" is one such clue. At the back of the book are the solutions to each riddle.

Pattern recognition riddles help you to see squares and rectangles within more complex designs. You are also encouraged to see diamonds as being squares rotated by 45 degrees. Many times a pattern is repeated, and that becomes the basis of multiplication.

Grouping encourages you to add common sums. An example would be sets of (8 + 3) + (6 + 5) + (4 + 7) = 33. By seeing that you can add to common subnumbers, you quickly find three elevens and then multiply by 3 in your head.

The two-step riddles have you determine what the total universe is (usually by multiplying) and then subtracting the exceptions to get the subset. One example has a building with regular intervals of windows, some lit and some not. How many are lit?

Most people never get to do the fun part of math, which is thinking up new and better ways to do things that build on imagination. By allowing your child to see the potential playfulness of what mathematicians do, this book will help create a better sense of what math is all about and that it can be fun.

After you have had a good time with the book, I suggest that you and your child create new puzzles for each other.

Build new knowledge from repeated patterns, wherever you find them!

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42 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Many ways for teachers to implement this great book!, August 31, 2001
By 
This review is from: The Grapes Of Math (Hardcover)
The Grapes of Math targets elementary students around the ages of 8-12, yet can be used in a simpler way with even younger children as an introduction to counting. There are sixteen colorful counting problems in the book, which are accompanied by a poem that provides a hint at counting the objects using a different method. Children are instructed not to count individual objects in the regular manner - "1...2...3..." - but rather to open their minds to new ways of perceiving the problems. Readers are encouraged to use creative methods, such as finding patterns, grouping, and using advanced problem-solving skills. These strategies direct students to solve a problem faster and more efficiently, and greatly incorporate the use of addition, subtraction and multiplication.

A teacher could use The Grapes of Math in many ways. One could post a problem each day, or week, on the board for children to solve at the beginning of a math lesson, to get students thinking mathematically, and on a higher level. Instructors could also break a class into pairs or small groups and photocopy the sixteen different problems, passing out a different problem to each pair/group. The children could have an allotted amount of time in which to come up with creative ways to count the objects on the page. After the pair/group has found several ways, they could vote on the most efficient method. Then the students could take turns sharing their solutions with the class. Furthermore, a teacher could share the book with his/her class, taking suggestions for the various problems and solving as a whole-class group. As a follow-up activity, children could design their own "counting problems," making colorful pictures with accompanying poetry to give their readers hints - such as the layout of The Grapes of Math. Then the children could trade with a partner and solve their partners' work.

I would highly recommend The Grapes of Math to future teachers. There are so many ways to implement this book, and it helps children who are learning multiplication a great deal. I enjoy the pictures, the poems, the creative solutions, and the challenges! I whole-heartedly rate this 5 STARS!
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33 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Grapes of Math, May 26, 2003
This review is from: The Grapes Of Math (Hardcover)
This book is a collection of 16 illustrated poems. In the back are the complete solutions. Most of the riddles deal with the repeated addition style of multiplication, but with a twist. In an array of five rows and five columns, there may be three missing. So, in order to find the total of 22 quickly, the student is guided to multiply five times five and then subtract the three missing ones.

The rhymes are catchy with the question in a different color font to help students when learning to decipher word problems. There is also a tip to the mental math solution following the question. The goal of this book is assisting students in learning to manipulate groups of objects in their mind.

I would suggest using a few poems as examples with real manipulatives and demonstrating to students how and why the solution can be found mentally. Read the solution along with them and physically move objects to show how they can multiply and then add or subtract, or even regroup objects. When students begin to catch on, invite them to try some more from the book, and write out the solutions before checking their answers. Advanced students may even want to create their own puzzles and illustrations. As an extra challenge, they can write the poems to go along with it. All of Tang's poems are written in couplets and this has the potential for being a good integration with language arts.

Why 5 stars?:
Tang has crafted a wonderful set of thinking exercises for students to explore mathematical properties through the use of patterns. By practicing with these poems, hopefully they will change the way in which they "see" difficult problems and be able to visualize in a way that makes sense to them.

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30 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great for the Early Grades!, July 12, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: The Grapes Of Math (Hardcover)
I sought out this book hoping to find material for my fifth grade classroom. I found the book to be better suited for grades 2-4. My students would probably have been interested in the puzzles, but I found it to be just that, a fun book for my students, not a book that I could really build a lesson around. I suppose I could have discussed different strategies for looking at problems, but that would have been about it. If you are looking for lesson material try checking out something by Theoni Pappas instead!
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21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More Math Please..., February 1, 2001
This review is from: The Grapes Of Math (Hardcover)
Greg Tang and Harry Briggs have taken the stuffiness and boredom out of math with their very creative and inventive book, The Grapes of Math: Mind Stretching Math Riddles. Word problems, told in rhyme with hints to help with solutions, combined with detailed, vibrant illustrations, challenge youngsters to look at old counting problems in new ways. Instead of formulas and memorization, Tang and Briggs show kids to think in innovative ways. Techniques include looking for patterns, regrouping numbers, combining multiples and subtracting first, in order to add. With an answer key and easy to understand, common sense explanations at the end of the book, kids 6-10 won't even know they're solving math problems. They'll think they're just having FUN!
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a book that makes math kids, August 16, 2005
This review is from: The Grapes Of Math (Hardcover)
The Grapes of Math is a realization for all that math is all around us. An elementary student addresses many situations familiar to everybody that involve math. Her situations and problems are on-going and lead in many different directions, yet all still relative to math. The book is thought provoking and discussion inspiring. The book is most effective in teaching the relevance of mathematics in everyday life through creative riddles. Through its illustrations and imaginative word problems the book creates wonders and fun with every turn of the page for all ages. The Grapes of Math is a big success at motivating kids to see mathematics as a fun necessity.

My son got an excellent math start with this book. Since then, math problems get his attention rather than something to avoid. Now he is the top math student in his class. He often shows up on the Beestar math honor roll (a nice web site for math practice at Beestar.org). I think The Grapes of Math is the cornerstone of his achievement. I highly recommend it.
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A good book for making math literacy facile, August 18, 2005
This review is from: The Grapes Of Math (Paperback)
The Grapes Of Math by Gregory Tang and Harry Briggs has one genre of math problems presented in an amusing fashion with good art. The genre is patterns of objects with breaks in the patterns. The children are expected to look at the patterns as groupings or shapes to figure out the total number of objects without counting one-by-one.

This is a good book. The kids like it. The problems are amusing, even bordering on tickling. My only problem with this book is that an overview of methods for solving the problems should be at the beginning. But so what? There are a few ways to look at the problems and the kids actually sit down to do them without being pestered.

Let me repeat this: after the initial disappointment that I had purchased math books, on their own the kids actually sat down to do the problems without being pestered. If this isn't an endorsement, then what is?
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More Riddles, Patterns, and Problem Solving, July 14, 2005
By 
Micole Roy (Sugar Land, Texas USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Grapes Of Math (Hardcover)
This great book provides the opportunity for children to enjoy mental math challenges. The riddles guide the reader to the author's solution. However, our son enjoyed looking for patterns and using his own clever ideas to quickly solve the problems. I gave this book to my six year old son the summer before he began second grade. He loved the rhymes and the pictures. He especially liked finding clever ways to count the objects without counting one by one. We made a family game of solving each riddle, working to see who would solve it first. Then we shared our strategies and reviewed the author's strategy which is presented in the back of the book.

I highly recommend this book! It provides good mental math practice in a fun way. It also reinforces the fact that there are many ways to solve a problem. Gifted children love patterns. This book builds on that and helps them to see additional ways in which finding patterns could be useful.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the grapes of math, March 11, 2003
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The Grapes Of Math (Hardcover)
The grapes of math is a challenging book full of problem solveing.It was great to read and after i read it once i read it again and again,i liked the fish problem the best.

good luck reading it!

~sally

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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great for the Early Grades!, July 12, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: The Grapes Of Math (Hardcover)
I sought out this book hoping to find material for my fifth grade classroom. I found the book to be better suited for grades 2-4. My students would probably have been interested in the puzzles, but I found it to be just that, a fun book for my students, not a book that I could really build a lesson around. I suppose I could have discussed different strategies for looking at problems, but that would have been about it. If you are looking for lesson material try checking out something by Theoni Pappas instead!
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The Grapes Of Math
The Grapes Of Math by Greg Tang (Hardcover - February 1, 2001)
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