Most of you are aware that, in addition to the {spectacular} resources that we publish ourselves for the Canadian home school community, we also carry several other great resources that either we, in our little home school, have used or our customers have highly recommended.
If you are new to this little space Under the Maple Tree however, you may not know that we carry Life of Fred Math books.
***If you do know about Fred, then please scroll down and take a look as there have recently been several new books added to the series that you may be interested in!***
If you are new to Fred, then let me introduce you!
As a long time math tutor and teacher (of about 20 years!) there was never a math curriculum that I really loved until I met Fred! Life of Fred Math is so different than any other math curriculum than you will find out there.
What makes Life of Fred special:
- Life of Fred is a fun story, not a dull textbook. Every mathematical concept is introduced and reinforced in the telling of the story - and it's a silly, fun whimsical story. This makes math time so much more pleasurable than it ever could be with a textbook and work book approach. If ever there was a "living math" curriculum, this is it!
- Life of Fred is relevant. I always hated it when kids came to me for tutoring and could not understand why certain mathematical concepts were useful. As much as we would go over them and look at the practicalities of what they were learning it just wasn't reinforced in the teaching that most books or teachers gave. In the Life of Fred series, Fred always encounters the concepts that the student is learning in "real life" before the concept is taught. This helps students to know that what they are learning actually has a purpose.
- Life of Fred is comprehensive. While many families chose to use Life of Fred to supplement the curriculum that they are already using, it is also a comprehensive curriculum that can stand on its own and can teach your child all that they need to know in math right from earliest grade school on through to university level learning.
- Life of Fred is easy for busy homeschooling families to use. The books are meant to be used independently with no parental preparation. As long as students can read, they can do their work on their own. For younger students, they only need the story read to them, there is no other work that the parent needs to do.
- Life of Fred is cheap! I know that many of you can relate to me on these terms: as homeschoolers we need to be very careful about where and how we spend our meager budgets. Life of Fred books are made with hard covers and with a high quality binding. They are non-consumable. The prices for Life of Fred books have come down as they have become more popular and you will only ever have to buy one copy for your family. And Maple Tree pricing is very competitive: when you take into account the cost of the books, shipping, taxes, duties and exchange, you won't likely find Life of Fred books cheaper in Canada than you will here. (Let me know if you do!)
Last year, around this time, I shared with you that the author had finally released the Elementary Series making the full curriculum complete. Since then, he has received feedback that parents and students want more Fred and so he has obliged us with supplementary materials.
(Below I will try to briefly outline what is available. For more complete descriptions and pricing please see my website though I appreciate your patience as not all of the new materials are on my website yet. You can check out samples here.)
Life of Fred Elementary Series
Life of Fred: Apples
Life of Fred: Butterflies
Life of Fred: Cats
Life of Fred: Dogs
Life of Fred: Edgewood
Life of Fred: Farming
Life of Fred: Goldfish
Life of Fred: Honey
Life of Fred: Ice Cream
Life of Fred: Jelly Beans
*This series is recommended for any student that is in grades one to four or who is not able to do adding, subtracting, multiplying AND long division competently. The author recommends that all students in this category start with Apples regardless of their previous math experience.
I agree as the way that he teaches the concepts brings a unique understanding to the topics rather than a focus on memorization and drilling. Older students will go through these books quite a bit faster than younger ones. As an example, I started both my middle daughters on the Apples book last year and the older one (in grade four) completed eight books while the younger one (in grade one) completed three of them in one school year.*
***Life of Fred Intermediate Series*** NEW
Life of Fred: Kidneys
Life of Fred: Liver
Life of Fred: Mine Shaft
*When Dr. Schmidt published the Elementary Series last year he said that it was all that was needed to prepare a student to start the "Before High School" series below. He has recently added these titles to his publications and recommends that they are used by students that need extra practice after finishing the elementary series and who aren't quite ready for the next series (i.e. they aren't strong enough in their adding, subtracting, multiplying and long division skills).
Dr. Schmidt also recommends using this series if the student goes through the elementary series quickly and has not yet started grade five.*
***(If you are looking to purchase this series through Maple Tree, please email as it has not yet been catalogued on the website. These titles will be available in early December 2012.)***
Life of Fred Before High School Series
Life of Fred: Fractions
Life of Fred: Decimals and Percents
***Life of Fred: Elementary Physics*** NEW
***Life of Fred: Elementary Physics*** NEW
Life of Fred: Pre-Algebra 1 with Biology
Life of Fred: Pre-Algebra 2 with Economics
*This series is for students that are at least in grade five though they may start the Fractions book in older grades as well. It is recommended that all students starting this series start with the Fractions book whether they are in grade five or grade eight and that they are able to competently do adding, subtracting, multiplying and long division.*
***Recently Dr. Schmidt added the Elementary Physics book to this series and it fits right into the middle of the series. Again, he decided that the series was complete with four titles however the rate that students were going through the books and the feedback asking for extra practice prompted him to produce this book which is meant to reinforce the learning that students have done to this point in the series. (If you are looking to purchase this series on my website, please email me if you would like the Elementary Physics book added to your order as it has not yet been catalogued on the website.)***
Life of Fred High School Series
Life of Fred: Beginning Algebra
Fred's Home Companion: Beginning Algebra
***Zillions of Practice Problems for Beginning Algebra*** NEW
Life of Fred: Advanced Algebra
Fred's Home Companion: Advanced Algebra
Life of Fred: Geometry
City Answers: Geometry
Life of Fred: Trigonometry
Fred's Home Companion: Trigonometry
*These titles are all at the high school level. The companion books are available for three of the titles and are used to divide the chapters in individual lessons. They also contain extra questions and solutions.*
***Please note that the new title Zillions of Practice Problems... was recently added to the high school series line up when the author was asked for extra practice problems because, as he explains it, parents were saying, "We want tons of problems along with completely worked out solutions... My kids are not crying when they read Fred—how could they be learning math without crying?" If you are currently using Beginning Algebra and want extra practice problems for your kids then this is the book for you. If you are planning to invest in Beginning Algebra then consider whether you might want to supplement with this book. (If you are looking to purchase Zillions..., please email me as it has not yet been catalogued on the website.)***
Life of Fred University Series
Life of Fred: Calculus
City Answers: Calculus
Life of Fred: Statistics
City Answers: Statistics
Life of Fred: Linear Algebra
City Answers: Linear Algebra
*These are upper level high school or university level books.*
I never want to sell anyone a book that they don't want and so I want to also let you know some of the drawbacks to this series:
- Some moms have told me that their kids don't like to read. If you kids don't like to read stories then they might not enjoy Fred.
- Some students don't want fun and silly to come anywhere near their math books. Some kids just like to work through problem sets. Life of Fred isn't the book for them.
- Some parents want more practice problems for their students. Dr. Schmidt is working to produce extra practice sets for many of the books that are now available. Other than these there are many avenues to find the extra problems that you need and many of them are free. Hopefully, in a later post I will share a few of these resources with you. Until then, I just like to encourage parents that it's easy to find a few extra problems to go with your child's Life of Fred lesson. It isn't easy to find fun, relevant and passionate applications to the many long problem sets that most other curriculums provide.
I hope that this {brief} description of the Life of Fred series gives you enough of an idea of what it is like and whether it would be of any use to your family. I would be happy to answer any other questions that you might have about these books if you think that they might be helpful in your home school.
Blessings, Friends!
Cori
This post could not be more timely. I have just given up teaching math altogether with my Sk'er. We were using the Math U See Primer and I was frustrated with how it moved so quickly through subjects, with no focus on mastery. I know that's the way they have set it up, but it just felt like a waste of time to me to "touch" on something, only to reteach it later. So...I wasn't sure whether just to can the primer, and start Alpha next year. I also liked the looks of Rightstart, but not the price tag.
ReplyDeleteUp until now no one I know used Life of Fred as anything more than a supplementary text.
Then I read the 3 R's and wondered how to teach math in the common sense way that Ruth Beechick describes it. She makes everything sound so easy - but I need a guide. Maybe LOF is the answer?
So...obviously you like LOF the best. Have you used the others? What are their weaknesses in your opinion? I am lost at sea in this math curriculum decision.
Sara,
ReplyDeleteI have used Math-U-See and the Three R's. I have heard good things about Rightstart but am not really familiar with it. Right now, my three school aged girls are doing Life of Fred exclusively with the occasional life lessons and drill sheet thrown in.
We used Math-U-See for a number of years and I felt that, while it got the job done, there wasn't really a wow factor built in - my kids didn't find a reason to like the work they were doing. They also had very little opportunity to fit what they were learning into real life. (I didn't like having them need to translate first that 8 was the brown bar before they could think through a problem like 8+2. It wasn't natural in the sense that Ruth Beechick would encourage in the Three R's.)
That being said, I did feel like my kids learned enough when they were doing Math-U-See. What I like about Fred is that he is so fun and relevant that my kids, almost without exception, ask to do their math first when we get out our school work. The learning is cemented in their minds because they are engaged with the subject matter.
I like Beechick's approach and I think that Life of Fred dovetails well because the books and the chapters/ lessons are rather short so there is a lot of time available to explore concepts in an everyday, common sense kind of way.
On the other hand, I don't think I would start Life of Fred with a kindergarten student unless they were already reading. The ideas are a lot to think through sometimes and math, until about first grade, can be very effectively done just through the everyday circumstances that you and your child encounter: shopping, baking, setting the table, sorting socks, and so on. Life of Fred approaches learning this way but there is no need to rush into formal math learning if your child isn't enjoying it.
I hope that helps. Feel free to call me if you have more questions! Or email or check out the website.
Take care,
Cori
www.mapletreepublications.ca
mapletreepublications@sympatico.ca
905-778-9412
Thanks for the thorough response Cori. I am definitely liking the sounds of LOF and completely agree with your assessment of Math U See. I have hard time wrapping my mind around the way they use the bars - not a good start if we are only in the Primer!
DeleteI'm comfortable with waiting to start formal math until next year. Everyday life and our calendar time are enough for right now. I think our HS co-op has the Apples book, so I'll take a closer look at their copy, but you'll probably see me at your table in KW next Spring :)