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  • Women Teaching and Learning Mathematics in the United States
  • Textbooks
  • Elementary Stuff
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Women Teaching Mahematics

Elementary Stuff

American History Museum

In colonial times and the early years of the Republic, most girls who learned a bit of math studied at home or in dame schools. They might sew numbers onto a sampler, as in the example shown. When they entered the classroom, they might write on erasable surfaces like a slate or a blackboard. From the 1820s, instruments like the teaching abacus complemented lectures and textbook recitations in American classrooms. As school budgets expanded and manufactured goods became more widely available, a rich array of goods were sold for schoolroom use. Special schools opened for very young children with their own equipment. Games also emerged to encourage learning in both the school and at home.


Pamphlet, Discovering Arithmetic Book 2, Workbook for Stern Apparatus

Pamphlet, Discovering Arithmetic Book 2 - Teacher's Edition

Pamphlet, Comments on Ancient Egyptian Multiplication

Pamphlet, New Experiments with Multiplication

A Group of Six Polycube Puzzles, Known as Impuzzables

Geoboard

Whiteboard Eraser

Dry Erase Whiteboard

Dry Erase Marker


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