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Books in Monster Math series

  • Monster Math, Grade 1

    School Specialty Publishing

    Paperback (Frank Schaffer, Jan. 15, 2010)
    The Monster Math series features grade-specific math practice workbooks with a really fun theme—monsters! The activities in each book cover important mathematical skills and support NCTM standards. The artwork on the pages—which includes fuzzy, funny-looking, goofy, endearing monsters––engages students’ attention and holds their interest. Each book includes “Monster Math Drills,” which are post-test activities that challenge students to solve problems and recap what they have learned.
    Q
  • Monster Math: Super : Ages 4 to 6

    Oksana Hlodan, Yvonne Cherbak

    Paperback (Lowell House, July 1, 2000)
    None
  • Mummies Multiply!

    Therese M Shea

    Paperback (Gareth Stevens Publishing, Jan. 15, 2019)
    Archaeologists have discovered an ancient tomb. They pry open a passage and out comes a mummy. But it is not just a mummy, it's a multiplying mummy! This entertaining yet educational volume uses beautifully illustrated mummies to teach young mathematicians about the fundamentals of multiplication, including skills highlighted in the Common Core. They'll also learn fun facts about mummies of ancient Egypt and other cultures. History and math collide in this "must have" for every elementary library collection or classroom.
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  • Patterns: What's on the Wall

    John Burstein

    Library Binding (Weekly Reader/Gareth Stevens Pub, Aug. 1, 2003)
    The four math monsters show how to make different kinds of patterns as they paint their walls.
    D
  • Vampires Divide!

    Therese M Shea

    Paperback (Gareth Stevens Publishing, Jan. 15, 2019)
    Division can seem like a complicated concept without the right tools to understand what it means in the real world, or the fantasy world. In this amusing and beneficial book, vampires are the math teachers, instructing readers about strategies to help them decipher and solve division problems. Equations are accompanied by striking illustrations, and an answer key offers opportunities for self-assessment. Fun fact boxes about vampires add further interest to this must-have math book.
    R
  • Monster Munch!

    Matt Mitter, Sue Hendra

    Board book (Reader's Digest, Aug. 3, 2010)
    What kinds of monsters are lurking in your house? Meet the pot and pan-eating kitchen monster, the tool-eating basement monster, and all their friends inside this fun, interactive book. Punch out the snack pieces from behind the cover and ";feed"; the hungry monsters throughout the story by opening the zipper mouth and slipping the pieces in. When mealtime is over, store the pieces in the pouch on the last page or put them back in their original places to start the fun all over again! SAMPLE TEXT: The monster in the sewer? To be kind, he's simply yucky! He'll eat a bug­€”some slime€”a slug€” a helpless rubber ducky. The monster in our dark garage complains and howls all night, unless he's fed a skate or sled or work boots€”left and right.
    H
  • Monster Math, Grade 3

    Frank Schaffer Publications

    Paperback (Frank Schaffer, Jan. 1, 2010)
    The Monster Math series features grade-specific math practice workbooks with a really fun theme—monsters! The activities in each book cover important mathematical skills and support NCTM standards. The artwork on the pages—which includes fuzzy, funny-looking, goofy, endearing monsters––engages students' attention and holds their interest. Each book includes "Monster Math Drills," which are post-test activities that challenge students to solve problems and recap what they have learned.
    U
  • Monster Math, Grade 2

    School Specialty Publishing

    Paperback (Frank Schaffer, Jan. 15, 2010)
    The Monster Math series features grade-specific math practice workbooks with a really fun theme––monsters! The activities in each book cover important mathematical skills and support NCTM standards. The artwork on the pages––which includes fuzzy, funny-looking, goofy, endearing monsters––engages students’ attention and holds their interest. Each book includes “Monster Math Drills,” which are post-test activities that challenge students to solve problems and recap what they have learned.
    Q
  • Calculating Area: Space Rocket

    John Burstein

    Paperback (Weekly Reader/Gareth Stevens Pub, July 1, 2003)
    The four math monsters show how to calculate area as they help Mina figure out how many tiles they need to make their new rocket launch pad safe.
    M
  • Monster Math, Grade K

    School Specialty Publishing

    Paperback (Frank Schaffer, Jan. 15, 2010)
    The Monster Math series features grade-specific math practice workbooks with a really fun theme—monsters! The activities in each book cover important mathematical skills and support NCTM standards. The artwork on the pages—which includes fuzzy, funny-looking, goofy, endearing monsters—engages students’ attention and holds their interest. Each book includes “Monster Math Drills,” which are post-test activities that challenge students to solve problems and recap what they have learned.
    L
  • Monster Needs a Christmas Tree

    Paul Czajak, Wendy Grieb

    Hardcover (Mighty Media Kids, Oct. 1, 2014)
    It’s almost Christmastime, and Monster needs a tree. But the holidays are filled with joy and so many fun things to do! After snowballs, sleds, and Santa Claus, will he find a tree in time? In this festive, rhyming story, Monster shows young readers that with a little creativity, a tree can be perfect any way you look at it.
    D
  • Making Tens: Groups of Gollywomples

    John Burstein

    Library Binding (Weekly Reader/Gareth Stevens Pub, Aug. 1, 2003)
    As they fill holiday gift boxes with different colored gollywomples for their ten friends, the four monsters learn about grouping numbers when counting and adding.
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