Life of Fred: Fractions

Life of Fred: Fractions

# 042828

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Item #: 042828
ISBN: 9780970999597
Grades: 5-7

Even before we had a description of this math program on our website or in our catalog, we had many, many inquiries about it (and a goodly number of sales). Is it the name? Is it the concept of a small, pointy-nosed 5-year old teaching Calculus at Kittens University? Is it the outrageous storyline? Or are people desperate for another approach to math? Although I was the one who reviewed and decided to carry this program, I was initially skeptical about its scope. After all, much of the text was given over to following the Life of Fred, with all the strange humor and unlikely scenarios that go along with it. In fact, that's part of the attraction for a student who really doesn't enjoy math (yes, I have one of those). So, could the course possibly have the content that a more traditional text (like Saxon) has? Moreover, what type of person would actually use this course, as entertaining and whimsical as it is (if you can think whimsy and Calculus in one thought). Well, after using Life of Fred for Beginning Algebra and reading through most of the Fractions book, I think I can answer some of these questions.

First, Fred IS the unlikely mathematician in all of us. Despite his youth and other cards stacked against him (you'll have to read the books to understand this), Fred is amazingly successful as a math professor. Why? It's because he finds math so intriguing, entertaining, and downright USEFUL in everyday life (his life, the Life of Fred). Why, math is everywhere in the world of Fred - and no matter how things are going, he can always see the math in it.

Then, there's the psychology of Fred. You want to help the little guy. I mean, he's smart, but so innocent, kind, helpful, endearing - small, helpless, underweight (why, when he was erroneously inducted into the army, they had to use a little cup instead of a helmet for his uniform!). Clearly the underdog in many situations, Fred has ended up in the hospital in both books I've read - even though one injury was accidental. But I digress. You do get wrapped up in the Life of Fred. And because you're rooting for him and concerned about him, you kind of get taken up in the math that pervades his thoughts. No matter how tough the Life of Fred gets, he always has time to explain the finer points of math to those needy souls around him. Don't get me wrong, Fred has plenty of fun, too. He always makes the best of things and has some great student/friends at Kittens who also seem to need math in their everyday lives...

These are, indeed, the most unconventional full-program math texts I've ever seen. Maybe that's why students who dislike traditional programs are so drawn to LOF. The books just seem more accessible and - well, friendly. Maybe it's just the author's personality or particular gift, but students who are turned off by traditional math seem to find refreshment and even inspiration in LOF. Although you may have read some debate on whether the series is too lightweight for a basal program, my two cents is that it is not. The math is all here - and then some. What is missing is repetition, redundancy, and a multitude of problems to work. These books are like my favorite college math text. When I first saw it, I thought it was too slim for a whole-semester course. Ha! Every word in that book was loaded. The text was so cunningly and concisely written that you actually had to study every word because nothing was repeated. While LOF isn't quite that concise (it does have a complete storyline along with the math), Dr. Schmidt doesn't waste words or your time. Every problem is almost like a brainteaser - just a little out of your reach unless you truly grasp the concepts. It gives you a chance to figure things out for yourself. There's a whole lot of brain-stretching going on. Therefore, gifted math students are also drawn to these courses as they allow them to be challenged. Another good candidate for LOF is the remedial student who has already been through the course using another text. If it just didn't click, I would try this one. Finally, a motivated or independent student would also appreciate using the course. It's purposely addressed to the student and intended to be self-teaching. In fact, the author prefers that students use these with very little help from you so they can learn to study and understand on their own. Even the solutions are addressed to the student. In fact, there's a lot of actual instruction in the solutions, which students should read after trying to solve problems on their own. In short, just about EVERY student could use this program. The only shortfall I have seen in the program is for students who really need a lot of constant repetition and reinforcement. In some sections there are just not enough problems, even using the Home Companion. I had this problem twice in Beginning Algebra as serious as it needs to be. I both made up some of my own problems and supplemented with problems from Saxon Algebra 1 and Algebra 2 (some of the material is actually more advanced than in that series). I have since run across several other supplemental products that I could have used as well.

Life of Fred is a series of 12 courses. Two of these are Fractions and Decimals & Percents. The author recommends waiting to start these until your child is old enough to work on his/her own (about 5th grade). Each of these courses should take less than a quarter of a year to complete. The new LOF Pre-Algebra 1 with Biology is formatted like the previous books, with BRIDGES rather than CITIES. It would fit in a teaching sequence between Fractions and Decimals & Percents and Beginning Algebra. You can get a good idea of what is taught in the course and the proportion of biology to algebra by checking out the table of contents on our website. Literally a "dream come true", Fred is every bit as entertaining while teaching biology as he is when teaching math! While this course will not replace high school biology, it will replace much of the biology instruction in a general science course. Pre-Algebra 2 with Economics completes the pre-algebra instruction, this time delving into topics such as interest rates, competition, opportunity costs, supply and demand. Following the same format as the Fractions, Decimals & Percents and Pre-Algebra 1 and 2, Dr. Schmidt has released Pre-Algebra 0 with Physics (formerly Elementary Physics). This book fits nicely into the Life of Fred sequence between Decimals & Percents and Pre-Algebra 1. Dr. Schmidt feels that too much time is lost before presenting physics in high school and this book is designed as an introduction to fill that gap. Algebra and Advanced Algebra should each take a little more than half a year. While Geometry takes place during one day in the Life of Fred (a Thursday after his sixth birthday), it is definitely a full year course. Trigonometry can be completed in half of a year and Calculus (although covering two full years of calculus) will take one year. According to Mr. Schmidt, after this progression "you will be ready to declare as a math major at a university at the upper division level and take third-year (junior-level) mathematics courses". For even more Life of Fred, there is also a Statistics course which "has much more material than is normally covered in a beginning university statistics course". It's been years since my required course as a business major at a university - I may just take this one myself. Partly to test the author's assertion and partly because life is full of decisions and, as the author says, "Success in life is 90% making the right decisions in the first place" (the other 10% is carrying them out). Also new is Linear Algebra (as serious as it needs to be). Scanning through the book, it looks a lot like an upper-level course called Finite Math that I took in college. It covers: solving systems of equations with one solution (includes Gauss-Jordan elimination, Gaussian elimination), many solutions, and no solution (includes data fitting); matrices; vector spaces; inner product spaces (including Fourier series and Gram-Schmidt orthogonalization process); linear transformations; and systems of equations into the future (including eigenvalues, stochastic matrices, Markov chains, Fibonacci numbers) It is described by Dr. Schmidt as a math course required by most colleges for math majors and should be taught after Calculus As far as progression, Dr. Schmidt has placed it at the very end of his other courses, after Statistics. Like other upper-level courses, this one has "Your Turn to Play" sections separating textual chunks. Each chapter ends with six CITIES. There is a separate answer key for answers not included in the text.

Organization and format of the books is similar; of course, they all have a captivating storyline centering on Fred Gauss, a very young university math professor. The author, Stanley F. Schmidt, Ph.D., is a witty guy, a good storyteller, and he also loves math. Unlike many programs, the text is not written at a 6th grade level. If anything, the text is imbued with a little "extra" knowledge in different areas - especially vocabulary. Dr. Schmidt also appears to be a Christian man. Although his books aren't preachy and in places tend toward gritty realism, you will find a strong plug for goodness here, along with a main character who says his prayers every night. Fractions, Decimals and Percents, and the Pre-Algebra books are structured a little differently than the upper-level books. Chapters in these are short (as are the books), ending with a Your Turn to Play problem set, followed by complete solutions with explanation. Generally, after every five chapters, there's a BRIDGE taking you from the culmination of the preceding chapters to the new material. Actually, there are five BRIDGES - your student has five tries to make it across the BRIDGE. These contain a ten-question review of everything learned to that point. Mr. Schmidt recommends that students get at least nine out of ten right to move on. Answers to these are in the back of the book. The final BRIDGE has 15 questions (20 in Decimals) and, again, five tries to pass. This gives a student ample opportunity to go back, study the material, and try again without feeling like they've failed. It is built-in remediation, rather than just failing and still going on (isn't this also the way we train our children? If they don't get it right, they need to correct and do it again). Starting in Beginning Algebra, chapters are longer. For courses with the Home Companion available (Advanced Algebra and Trigonometry), this book breaks the chapters into bite-sized lessons. Natural breaks occur when the student encounters a Your Turn to Play (series of problems with completely-worked solutions following), but the Companions also provide sets of problems for each lesson in between. There are 108 lessons as laid out in the Fred's Home Companion Beginning Algebra study guide, but many of these are short; most students would combine some of them. By comparison, Saxon has 120 lessons, but this does not include testing whereas LOF's lesson count does. At the end of each chapter there are six CITIES (which all have names so you can assign a student to do Palmetto and Radcliffe for homework). Actually, I'm not sure why they have names - but, as with BRIDGEs, these determine whether to move forward. They have some review material from previous chapters, but are largely chapter recaps. They take roughly 20-30 minutes to complete and, again, give your student a chance to test, review, and test again (or you might work the first two cities together, assign the next two, and use the final two as tests). The first two CITIES have all answers provided; the next two have only odd answers shown; the last two have none. All answers not in the text are in the Home Companion or Answer Key. The back of each upper-level book (except Calculus) has an A.R.T. section (All Reorganized Together) containing definitions, formulae, theorems postulates - all the stuff you'd like summarized in one handy place together for easy reference. The Life of Fred actually begins in the Calculus as serious as it needs to be book (in which Fred is born), the first written (in 2001). Unlike the other volumes, it has all the Your Turn to Play questions and answers in the back and a Further Ado section containing even more rigorous material for you to include at your discretion. Possibly because this volume was originally written for college students, the material is edgier in this first book (Fred's dad drinks, his family is somewhat dysfunctional, and there are other allusions to drugs, alcohol and "hanky panky"). You may wish to skim ahead of your student and "edit" anything unsatisfactory.

So far, I'm giving a thumbs up to this unique (and slightly eccentric) math program. It has made math more palatable (and interesting) for my daughter. It has some unusual and novel approaches to problem solving (like a simple, foolproof method for factoring trinomials where the squared term has a coefficient > 1 instead of the guess and check approach employed in other books). It incorporates critical thinking and a discovery approach to math by its very nature. It integrates the value of learning in other curricular areas. It teaches math in the context of real life - okay, real life uses for math in a kind of surreal life. And, who wouldn't like a math book that begins, "Hi! This is going to be fun," then follows through on that promise? Visit www.stanleyschmidt.com for other Raves from Readers or to find out more about the content of the books - or even to contact the author directly. (You can even read some of Mr. Schmidt's 8:30 prayers). I'm not sure how Dr. Schmidt can include his home phone number on his website and encourage people to email and phone him with questions, but I have read several testimonies to his responsiveness. For a full scope and sequence, visit our website and take a peek at the table of contents for each level.

As a teacher, I have obviously enjoyed this course. But my daughter, Janine, has never had the innate appreciation for math that I do. Let's ask her what she thought (or thinks - we still have 14 lessons to go!). Here are her comments on Life of Fred Beginning Algebra as serious as it needs to be:

"I love Life of Fred because of, well, Fred! But also because this is the most creative math course I've ever seen. When I first looked at the math course, the thing that made me excited (besides the story) was not seeing millions of problems. Just a few, thought-provoking and even funny ones. In the lesson book, you'll only have one small page, then you can be done. The Cities don't even have that many problems. But they are all worth your time and un-repetitive, and most inspire a challenge or are a little puzzle. Mom didn't think it would be a full-fledged math course. But the more we've worked through it, I've seen that it's quite a bit harder and requires more thinking. No wonder it's been put on some "gifted" lists. Moving along... .the writing is HILARIOUS! It's almost like Stanley Schmidt and I have the same sense of humor sometimes. I've read Fractions and most of Begininng Algebra and enjoyed both immensely. It's a ridiculous, bizarre little series, which makes me love it all the more! My brother likes it so much he showed it to his college friends... and of course they all laughed. The characters are amazing, and the illustrations (especially of Fred) are priceless. Stanley even has a little fun subtly (and not so subtly) teasing movies, doctors, math books and a whole myriad of things, and he has never failed at amusing me. Math was my most hated subject. And while I can't say that I had a complete turnaround and wake up every morning saying "YAY! I get to do math today! Wheeeeee!" I can say that Life of Fred has taken all the dullness out, keeps me captivated, and injected a lot of fun. I'd call it an art piece, if a math book can be an art piece. An amazing, amazing series, even more so considering we're talking about a math course."

Well, there you have it - from teacher and student. Who says math can't be entertaining?




Category Description for Life of Fred:

Life of Fred (LOF) is an unconventional series of math texts that seem accessible and friendly, especially for students who dislike traditional programs. According to Dr. Schmidt, the author, this series is designed to teach you the math you need to know without repetition, redundancy, and a multitude of problems to work. LOF follows the storyline of Fred's life while incorporating solid math concepts and skills. Motivated or independent students will appreciate this series, as well as gifted math students who might need a challenge. Written to the student and intended to be self-teaching, the author prefers that students use these with very little help from you, so they can learn to study and understand on their own. Even the solutions (found in the text) are addressed to the student. In fact, there's a lot of actual instruction in the solutions, which students should read after trying to solve problems on their own. Math in a story context can sometimes make more sense to students than stand-alone math concepts - especially if it's an entertaining story! Students do two books per year up through pre-algebra; beginning with algebra, one book per year.




Category Description for COMPREHENSIVE PROGRAMS - ALL GRADES:



Primary Subject
Mathematics
Grade Start
5
Grade End
7
ISBN
9780970999597
Binding
Cloth Text
Pages
192
Edition
Illustrated
Language
English
Ages
11+
Audience
Elementary/High School
Author
Stanley F. Schmidt
Format
Hardcover Book
Brand Name
Polka Dot Publishing
Weight
1.25 (lbs.)
Dimensions
10.38" x 7.25" x 0.68"
Start typing your question and we'll check if it was already asked and answered. Learn More
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Why did you choose this?
Rainbow Resource Center Store
I have used LOF in the past and I'm revisiting it by purchasing Fractions
Amber S on Feb 6, 2023
I think this will help my son. He's good in math but is tired of the constant problems and he loves to read. I hope this will be what he needs to love math and school again.
Vanessa S on Oct 5, 2022
I have used LOF in the past and I'm revisiting it by purchasing Fractions
Amber S on Feb 6, 2023
Continuing on with this series. Have used since Life of Fred Apples!
Christy K on Oct 25, 2022
I think this will help my son. He's good in math but is tired of the constant problems and he loves to read. I hope this will be what he needs to love math and school again.
Vanessa S on Oct 5, 2022
Trying it out for more interesting math book
Kierra W on Jul 22, 2022
We use LOF for our homeschool. My "7th grader" just finished Kidney Beans, Liver & Mineshaft and is ready for Fractions!
Sarah L on Mar 7, 2022
We have been using this series for a few years and my three daughters love the story and the simple, yet complete, way to do math. This is just the next book in line for us to buy.
Sigrid on Nov 28, 2021
This has been the only math that hasn't caused tears and frustration.
Cindy S on Jul 28, 2021
I love all the Fred books and plan to use this one with my 5th and 6th grade class as a challenge.
Karen D on Jul 24, 2021
Summer review for my almost 7th grader. I am using the series with my 5th grader and LOF makes math fun.
Margaret D on Jul 8, 2021
Love LOF...we finished the elementary series and need to move up to fractions and decimals.
User on May 13, 2021
Combining reading and math- like life
Angela G on May 9, 2021
My daughter needs extra help preparing for 6th grade math
Kimberly M on May 2, 2021
My son loves the story based format.
Janae K on Apr 22, 2021
next level
KerryAnn M on Apr 6, 2021
7th grader who needs support in math
Sarena D on Feb 8, 2021
For my daughter who is struggling to understand fractions. I've heard good things about this series and thought I'd give it a try.
stacy k on Jan 20, 2021
Want additional help with her current math curriculum. My daughter reviewed with me and likes the idea of reading while learning math. Hope it works!!
Betty R on Nov 23, 2020
My son loves the Life of Fred series. He was sad moving to a different curriculum so I've decided to try it again.
User on Oct 25, 2020
We love Lif of Fred!
Robert G on Jul 22, 2020
I thought it would be a fun Friday subject (Friday's are supposed to be fun)
Amanda K on Jul 20, 2020
good reviews
maureen a on Jul 20, 2020
recommended by friends
Teresia on May 26, 2020
To help my older students with understanding math operations when traditional math lessons don't click with them
Melinda L on May 19, 2020
wonderful explanation of the steps needs to correctly understand how to get the answers.
Danyail M on May 13, 2020
My boys love Life of Fred.
Sarah S on May 4, 2020
Hoping it will engage my math-reluctant 5th grader.
User on Apr 27, 2020
Life of Fred works for my kids. These books help reinforce math conceps and help them "click."
Sherri R on Mar 20, 2020
Homeschool
Jennn P on Feb 15, 2020
It seemed like a good fit for my child who doesn't like math but is smart and creative.
lacy s on Aug 9, 2019
My high schoolers have some math foundation gaps and are currently uninspired with their current remedial curriculum. I read great reviews on Amazon about the success others are having with these books at various ages and stages of math ability. They're having fun and motivated to learn more. Plus, the concepts seem to take deeper root as the students understand what they're doing better. I desire this for my daughters as well.
Shani W on Aug 2, 2019
tried everything else hoping this is a good fit for my son
Jennifer W on Jul 19, 2019
Kids like this series
XIN J on Jul 14, 2019
Supplement my daughter's math program from school.
Jennifer H on Jun 2, 2019
My right brain children will benefit from this unique approach to teaching mathematics.
Laura G on Jan 24, 2019
We love Fred.
Michelle M on Dec 7, 2018
I'm looking for a good curriculum for a kid who has a lot of math anxiety.
Carly F on Dec 5, 2018
My children love and learn from Life of Fred books. My oldest has used them through high school and is going to be a math major in college.
Julia N on Sep 21, 2018
I added an additional student to my math recovery class.
Cindy H on Sep 13, 2018
Morning Time
Stacy C on Aug 18, 2018
We enjoy this series as a supplement to Math Mammoth.
Raquel E on Aug 17, 2018
i heard a lot of good things on these books
Michelle V on Jul 12, 2018
We have use BJU Math with my kids since kindergarten but after much research have decided to give Life of Fred a try for my 7th grader.
Elizabeth Q on Jun 26, 2018
I have a smart kid who's great with words, but struggles with number anxiety. Based on reviewing this curriculum and many reviews, we think it will be a good fit for our kid.
Helen H on May 7, 2018
I got this mostly as a refresher but also for the concepts that are taught in the book that were never taught in public school.
Tina C on Apr 20, 2018
Well, everyone needs fractions in their math toolbox.
M L on Apr 12, 2018
Needed a new, fresh curriculum for my teen, who struggles with math.
Leslie N on Jan 18, 2018
My daughter enjoyed the elementary series of Fred.
Seirah C on Jan 10, 2018
Have been very pleased with prior math books.Very happy to have a curriculum that makes math make sense.
User on Jan 2, 2018
Looking for a new ways to help my children with math.
Sondra M on Nov 8, 2017
Have used all previous levels of LOF.
Megan F on Sep 21, 2017
Continuing on with this series. Have used since Life of Fred Apples!
Christy K on Oct 25, 2022
Trying it out for more interesting math book
Kierra W on Jul 22, 2022
Are there any success stories of people who used this series through high school and transitioned to traditional math courses in college?
A shopper on Jul 10, 2020
Life of Fred: Fractions
Life of Fred: Fractions
Life of Fred Pre-Algebra Set
Life of Fred Pre-Algebra Set
BEST ANSWER: My kids have used this series a bit. I wouldn’t recommend it for college prep. Maybe more for fleshing out their ‘core’ math books. If college is your goal and high test scores, I would recommend Saxon. One of my kids was a National Merit Scholar Finalist - 4 full years of college tuition and boarding paid - and only used Saxon math. She was more than prepared and practically aced the SAT. Another one of my kids isn’t so ‘scholarly’ and 4 years of college just isn’t their goal, so I have used Life of Fred more with him.
I am interested in using Life of Fred beginning with the Fractions book. My son just finished Singapore 4a. Would he be ready to move on with the Life of Fred Fractions or would there be some math concepts that get lost in between? Thanks so much for your thoughts.
A shopper on Jun 29, 2018
BEST ANSWER: I think that would work out all right. Two of my kids switched after 4B, I would say the biggest thing is that they need to be really smooth and efficient with their arithmetic in order to be ready for Life of Fred Fractions.
4.9 / 5.0
12 Reviews
5 Stars
4 Stars
3 Stars
2 Stars
1 Star
11
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Rated 5 out of 5
Excellent program!
My daughter had made it to 7th grade but was about two and a half years behind with our traditional math programs (we tried several). She struggled to understand concepts, really didn't "get" place value, etc., which made progression through curricula difficult. This was our Hail Mary. Not only does she seem to be learning the concept behind the problems, but she actually likes pulling out her math book now. She loves the silly story that frames the Life of Fred books. And because she finds them interesting, she has forgotten that she used to be afraid of doing math work!

We began with Level K, "Kidneys," did L and M, and are almost finished with "Fractions" now. The lessons are short and have only a handful of problems at the end. This works great for us, because my daughter used to look at the pages of problems that followed each level in her old book, and she would immediately become intimidated and frustrated--even when I was only assigning part of the work. My favorite thing about the LOF problems is that they are all word problems! The student must think about how to go about solving them; the math problem is not just listed out. This builds real-world skills, showing how to use math to solve a problem.

Overall, this program has been a huge blessing for us, and we plan to continue with LOF indefinitely.
September 11, 2021
Rated 5 out of 5
Life of Fred is a fun and entertaining way to learn math!
My daughter loves Life of Fred Fractions! She enjoys the flow of each chapter and the 10 questions that she answers at the end. I enjoy the bridges because it gives her multiple chances to understand what she is learning if she is having difficulty. Overall a great supplement to our math this year.
September 4, 2020
Purchased
over 2 years ago
Rated 5 out of 5
Way beyond math
My 6th grader uses this as well as Singapore math and Beast Academy. Life of Fred is different in that it is not just math. It is math, reasoning, humor and logic. We enjoy it very much.
November 19, 2019
Purchased
over 3 years ago
Rated 4 out of 5
Good book
The life of Fred fractions is unique and the kids like to read into it and do the lessons .
November 26, 2018
Purchased
over 4 years ago
Rated 5 out of 5
This book holds my son's attention and breaks fractions down into simpler steps.
May 18, 2016
Purchased
over 6 years ago
Rated 5 out of 5
I have seven children ages 22 down to 3 and NO other curriculum has been as helpful or enjoyable as Life of Fred Math We've used all the books from Apples (1st grade) to Calculus with the various ages of children My kids who were older when we started using the books learned more math to mastery in one year than they had in all the years before put together My three oldest (In 11th 9th and 7th grade at the time) had pretty much given up hope of ever understanding math but after using Life of Fred: Fractions (the book they all started with) they not only "get" math they LIKE math! Plus they learn it all on their own just like they should
July 19, 2014
Rated 5 out of 5
LOF Fractions is the book that turned Math around for my son I read about Life of Fred(LOF) on a homeschooling board and knew that I had to at least try it The story of Fred is engaging(I even enjoy reading the stories!) and at the same time weaves mathematical concepts into the lesson The problems in the book are presented in a fun and easy setting but are still challenging enough that students learn Math and the whys and wherefores behind the concepts The book is beneficial to those students whose strengths lie in verbal and language abilities It puts Math in 'their language' The LOF series has given my son a confidence in Math that I had not seen before and has taught him to work independently Another plus for this series is cost LOF is one of the least expensive Math programs available for homeschoolers My son is now in high-school and we will continue to use the LOF series for his Math credits
August 9, 2012
Rated 5 out of 5
Our daughter has dyscalculia and other math curricula caused volcanic eruptions of tears If you hadn't reviewed LIFE of FRED in such detail I wouldn't have contacted the books' author and my daughter probably wouldn't be smiling and laughing her way through her math today! Thanks again!
September 30, 2010
Rated 5 out of 5
My 12 year old son tired of the same old math drills year after year and I knew he needed something more to spice up his enthusiasm He loves math and we typically use two curriculums for it but it got dull Fred is amazing! It is self-taught which my son thought was fabulous and it is so engaging! My son was hooked once he opened the book We ordered fractions to review but really just so we could start at the beginning of Fred's journey it's that good It's the first subject that my son does everyday This curriculum is very easy to use and you need only the text It is a very worthwhile investment I have to say that this is a one of a kind type of math program and I have no negative thoughts about it We have used A Beka Singapore and Math-U-See for elementary math For secondary math I have to say Life of Fred is my top choice
August 16, 2010
Rated 5 out of 5
Wow!!! I cannot begin to express how excited I am about this math program I ordered Life of Fred Fractions as an experiment I received the book on Friday and gave it to my daughter just to look over She started to READ and after a few minutes she came to me and asked for a piece of paper I watched in awe! By Sunday morning I had to pry the book out of her hands and demand that she put her math book away for a while She had completed half the book on her own My daughter had previously finished the first half of Singapore 4 which covered fractions; however she just as easily mastered new concepts as well as math concepts she had been taught previously When I would pass her room I could hear her laughing out loud at the stories!!! I have since recommended it to everyone I know It is a unique book that tests whether the student truly understands math concepts My daughter self checks all the problems until she reaches a "bridge" and she brings the problems to me to check (answers are in back) If anything is missed I can tell immediately which concept needs to be reviewed "Chapters" are short (as little as one page) but teach an incredible amount of information I believe this would be an excellent series to prepare a student for the SAT
March 3, 2010

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