Author:Naomi Sani
Does the sight of your child's maths homework fill you with dread? Do you look for any excuse when they ask you to explain equations, fractions or multiplication? Maths can often leave children - and parents - perplexed.
How to do Maths so Your Children Can Too works through maths topics with a simple step-by-step approach, explaining the new ways of teaching maths that confuse so many parents. This book will show you how to:
- Master 'number bonds' and 'number lines'
- Divide by 'chunking'
- Multiply using 'the grid method'
- Work with fractions, percentages and ratios
- Understand number and place value
Bridging the gap between primary and secondary school - when children often struggle - and packed full of simple, accessible examples, this essential guide will banish your maths phobia and take the pain out of homework time.
This works through the maths topics of the national curriculum in simple steps and explains some of the new methods of teaching them - often the most confusing thing of all in my experience.
—— The BooksellerKnight expertly captures that particular guilt and self-loathing that amplifies the internal misery of the outwardly successful. Her best creation is mediocre lawyer JP, a man who rages impotently at life by leaving abusive comments beneath online articles. Everyone in this world struggles to connect despite always being connected, the “men tippetty-tapping with thumbs, texting their life stories all about town, average as sandwiches, boring as soup.”
—— Financial TimesWorking with shifting points of view to bring her portrait of collective disaffection and internal dissonance into sharp focus, Knight keeps a disciplined hold on her material... the uncompromising honesty is impressive. So, too, is her skill in eliciting sympathy for even the most unlikely character
—— Sunday TimesThe characters are like ants under a magnifying glass, and Knight masterfully creates a suffocating atmosphere... a brave and poignant indictment of 21st-century living.
—— Daily TelegraphTHE SUNSHINE YEARS is a brilliant story by one of Britain's best young writers. It is a passionate, stylish novel that tells the big new truths about relationships, and is one of those books that shimmers with ideas and observations. Afsaneh Knight is a star
—— Andrew O'HaganAfsaneh Knight handles it with real aplomb, treating everybody concerned with a sympathy that never curdles into indulgence, and making their ... dilemmas feel genuinely urgent.
—— Daily MailBeautifully acute... It engage[s] thoughtfully, and surprisingly, with our struggle to find fulfilment in a strange world'
—— Times Literary SupplementIt's a mark of Knight's talent that JP can be so contradictory, but never unconvincing. By the time the novel has wound down to a bittersweet and pleasingly enigmatic ending, you'll even miss the guy, and all his friends. Which shows just how well Knight has done her job
—— The AustralianKnight's second novel is a bleak and brilliant book, a disturbing anatomy of the privileged but unexamined life
—— Sydney Morning HeraldA bleak portrayal of Sydney-sider thirty-something digressives and nihilists. I liked its refreshing inconclusiveness and its sparse dialogue-driven dramatic arc, and its evocations of physicality
—— Will SelfMassive and freewheeling as well as tight, acutely observed, moving and very funny ... deeply satisfying
—— Evie WyldHot Things to Do Now - funny, squirm-inducing
—— GraziaWitty and perceptive
—— Woman and Home