Saved by Dr. Ron Eaglin
on October 9, 2009 at 11:07:09 am
Pyramath(TM) Wiki
This site is designed so educators can share ideas and lesson plans that use the Pyramath game and game ideas. To learn more about the basic rules of Pyramath go to thePyramath Home Page. We encourage teachers to jump in and contribute new ideas, games and lesson plans. Do a Request Account and I will approve it ASAP. Sign up for our mailing list - we give notifications of new products about once every six months - click here
Lesson plans are submitted by real teachers that use Pyramath. If you have a way that you are using Pyramath mail us at corporate@iseecards.com and I will add it to the sets of plans for other teachers.
The basic rules for Pyramath and the Guide are available at the About Pyramath page (click here). Additional games beyond the basic game have game rules here.
The online version is both free and a great way to teach students the game. One trick is that you must drop cards with the MOUSE over the YELLOW DROP AREA for the cards to know where you want to play them. This is easy in the five card version, but a bit trickier in the 7 card version because the drop areas are a bit smaller. Remember - the mouse should be OVER the YELLOW area when you play a card. This is a great option for teacher that want kids to play the game but don't have the budget to purchase decks (which is sad).
We are getting ready to place the Pyramath Puzzles in a few test newspapers. We will keep the original puzzles and solutions on the page linked below. Feel free to use these puzzles for class lessons or in school newsletters - they are fun and pretty easy.
To contribute to the Pyramath site - you simply have to request an account (this is in the upper right of the screen). Please give school or reason for contributing to the site. You may also email me directly at reaglin@mail.ucf.edu with ideas and I will post them. If you wish to become a Pyramath Reseller you will need to request the reseller agreement - please send an email to corporate@iseecards.com with the subject Reseller Agreement. We will help you through the process of becoming a reseller. As soon as I get time I will post the local resellers names and areas on our Pyramath Resellers Page.
Why Pyramath
A picture is worth 1000 words. This is my daughter.
Pyramath was developed by Dr. Ron Eaglin - a professor at the University of Central Florida and is trademarked and operated by I See Cards. This wiki is designed to help teachers and parents using Pyramath to aid their students and children develop math skills. Other sites created by the author are below.
Comments (0)
You don't have permission to comment on this page.