SKU: 89041718306

Math Mammoth Early Geometry

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Description

Math Mammoth Early GeometryMath Mammoth Early Geometry is a worktext that covers geometry topics for grades 1 3. The first lessons in the book have to do with shapes. Children learn to identify and draw basic shapes. Using cut out shapes, they put several shapes together to form new ones. They also divide existing shapes into new ones by drawing a line in shapes. Students also explore some geometric patterns and make shapes in a tangram like game. Starting from the lesson

Math Mammoth Early Geometry is a worktext that covers geometry topics for grades 1-3.

The first lessons in the book have to do with shapes. Children learn to identify and draw basic shapes. Using cut-out shapes, they put several shapes together to form new ones. They also divide existing shapes into new ones by drawing a line in shapes. Students also explore some geometric patterns and make shapes in a tangram-like game.

Starting from the lesson Polygons, the lessons are for third grade level. In the first three lessons of this section, students sort shapes into categories based on their attributes, and learning, in particular, about quadrilaterals as a category.

Next, we focus on the area of rectangles and shapes composed of rectangular areas. In the lesson Getting Started with Area, students tile shapes with unit squares cut out of paper, thus learning the foundation of how area is measured. From there, the lessons gradually lead to the thought that area of a rectangle can be found by multiplying its side lengths. Students learn about different units for area (both metric and customary) and get hands-on experience on finding the area of rectangles by measuring the sides in inches or centimeters.

Then the lessons deal with the area of compound (rectilinear) shapes, whose area can be found by decomposing the shape into (non-overlapping) rectangles.

In this context, we also study the distributive property in disguise. A rectangle is divided into two parts, and its area is found in two different ways: either as the area of the entire rectangle, or by adding the areas of the two parts.

The last major topic in the book is perimeter. Students learn perimeter as the Ògo-around measureÓ: the total distance when you go or travel around the shape. Then, several lessons focus on both area and perimeter, to make sure students learn to distinguish between these two concepts. We investigate rectangles that have the same area but different perimeters, and also rectangles that have the same perimeter but different areas.

The answers are appended.

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SKU: 89041718306

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Amazon Customer
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
Great!
Format: Paperback
Great!
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Reviewed in the United States on August 23, 2023
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Phyllis Ann Karr
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
Well argued
Format: Paperback
Perhaps I should say at once that giving this slim but meaty volume five stars doesn't mean I personally agree with it. It has been many years since I have subscribed to the substitutionary theory of Jesus' death or the idea that the Bible is anything other than a record of human interfaces with the Unknown. But a review is not the place to argue such points at length. Also, it behooves people who want to think, to seek out alternate and even opposing points of view, in order to test and maybe revise their ideas. Jeremy Treat did not change my mind, but he might have if I held the same view he apparently does of Scripture. He argues well, clearly, and persuasively, and makes a Christianity grounded on this view look at least potentially like a pretty good basis for decent living. There are one or two points that troubled me a little. The concept that Jesus died for us as a community is sound in itself, but if carried to extremes looks very much like the idea that underlay the infamous religious wars and persecutions. Also, on page 86, Treat says: "Forgiveness is not merely dismissing a wrong. My wife and I teach our children that when someone apologizes to them, they should not respond by simply saying, 'It's okay' … To truly forgive, one acknowledges the wrongdoing but chooses to not hold it against the wrongdoer. Forgiveness is … accepting the penalty on behalf of the wrongdoer for the sake of the relationship. It is absorbing the pain yourself rather than seeking to put it back on the other person." Now, to me, this looks like such a clear recipe for Trouble that I very much wish Treat provided several examples for how, exactly, he sees it working in everyday life. Sometimes, as when the apology is a "Sorry" for inadvertently jostling you in a crowd, the simple "It's okay" seems to me by far the best response. These few possible danger points, however, should be understood in the context of the book as a whole, which gives me the very strong impression of a practical pastor who knows his stuff, makes things hang coherently together, and probably gives useful and comforting counsel. I'm guessing, by his book, that he is a man I'd enjoy talking with in person.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2023
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L. L. Roberts
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 5
Great sink organizer!
Good quality storage/organizer for the kitchen sink. It’s stable and can hold an assortment of dish cleaning products close to the sink. It has a plastic dish underneath to collect drip-off water. This is exactly what I needed to organize!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 29, 2026
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Jan Holder
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 5
Great kitchen organizer
I love this handy kitchen sink organizer! I like things to be neat and tidy. This little product does the trick! It holds my dish liquid, hand soap, brushes, disposal cover and my sponges. The size is perfect and it looks great next to my sink. The organizer is made of metal and is built very well. It even has a drip pan. No more stuff all around the sink. This keeps it all organized so well. Love it!
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Reviewed in the United States on July 18, 2025
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patti frost
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
Looks great. Holds ALOT!
Love it! Sturdy! Hold 3 soap dispensers.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2026

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