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    crisc #24081 08/27/08 09:27 AM
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    Kriston Offline OP
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    Yes, I am very curious about the algebra tiles. I stared at them for a long time before I finally said, "Oh, what the heck! I'll give it a try." It seems like an interesting approach at least...

    The cubes that we have--and they do look like the same idea as the Omnifix--are cubes with itty-bitty holes on 3 sides and itty-bitty pegs on the other 3 that fit together and hold a structure together. So they're really just blocks that "stick."


    Kriston
    crisc #24083 08/27/08 09:30 AM
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    The thing I like about the omnifix cubes as that they fit together in such a way that you have to preplan what you are building before you buitd it. Let's see if I can put this into words that make sense.

    If you have four cubes and you plug one cube on top of one and another to the side of the bottom one, you can't put one in the corner to make a four cube square.

    Does that make sense. So you can't just build up and onto. You kind of have to envision what you want to build and take this into consideration before you start building.

    It's an awesome math manipulative for spatial and 3-D thinking.

    The 3D problem solving book says grade 6-12, but for sure our 8 year olds can work in it no problem. Even DD6 can do some of it. She plays with it even when we aren't doing guided learning.

    I bought 500 and with two kids working together that works pretty well. But if money wasn't an object, I'd buy 500 more!

    I don't know if these are similar blocks to the Singapore ones Kriston is talking about, I haven't seen those.

    incogneato #24084 08/27/08 09:31 AM
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    p.s. sorry for the typos all. I type very fast and am working on perfectionism issues, so if I don't see them before I post, I'm not going to edit unless it's for clarity. grin

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